Complete the text message to a roommate about decorating the new apartment.

We finally have a place to live, but we don't have any _____ yet! We should visit the thrift store tomorrow to buy a sofa and a table.

The correct answer is furniture.

In English, "furniture" is an uncountable noun. Even when you are talking about multiple items like a sofa, a table, and chairs, the word "furniture" never takes an "-s" at the end.

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Noun

  • The cat sat on the mat. — concrete nouns (things you can touch)
  • Happiness is important. — abstract noun (idea/quality)
  • London is beautiful. — proper noun (specific name, capitalised)
  • I need some information.uncountable noun (no a/an, no plural)

A noun names a person, place, thing, idea, or quality. Nouns determine article choice, verb agreement, and pronoun reference. Types: common/proper, concrete/abstract, countable/uncountable.

Test: can you put the or a before it? Can you make it plural? If yes to either → it's functioning as a noun.

Countable and uncountable

  • some advice — ❌ an advice / advices (uncountable → no article, no plural)
  • a piece of furniture — ❌ a furniture / furnitures
  • How much water? — ❌ How many water? (uncountable → much)
  • fewer people — ❌ less people (countable plural → fewer)

English nouns are either countable (take a/an, form plurals, use many/few) or uncountable (no plural, use much/little). The choice is partly arbitrary and must be memorised.

Test: can you put a number in front? Three chairs → countable. Three furnitures ❌ → uncountable. Use a unit phrase instead: three pieces of furniture.

English Grammar Basics

  • She is a teacher. — verb be + noun complement
  • He runs every day. — present simple, third-person -s
  • They don't like coffee. — negation with do-support
  • I have two cats. — possession, countable noun, no article before plurals

These sentences demonstrate English Grammar Basics — the foundational patterns every other topic builds on: parts of speech, basic tenses, articles, and simple sentence structure.

If you can identify the verb, the subject, and count the noun correctly, you've nailed the basics that make everything else click.

A2 | Elementary | Pre-intermediate

  • I went to the cinema yesterday. — past simple
  • I have visited Paris twice. — present perfect (life experience)
  • If it rains, I'll take an umbrella. — first conditional
  • You should see a doctor. — modal for advice

These patterns are A2 — the second CEFR level. At A2 you move past survival phrases into real grammar: past tenses, the present perfect, basic conditionals, and modals for advice/obligation.

Marker: if you can describe yesterday and give simple advice, but struggle with abstractions or nuance, you're at A2.

Easy

  • She is a teacher. — one verb form, one rule
  • I have two cats. — basic possession, short sentence
  • He doesn't like coffee. — simple negation with do-support
  • Only one answer is clearly correct; distractors are obviously wrong.

Easy marks beginner-level challenges: A1–early A2, one rule at a time, everyday vocabulary, no trick questions.

Use "Easy" when you want to build confidence on a specific rule without interference from other grammar or tricky contexts.