Examples of mass noun in the following topics:
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- When two nouns differing in number are joined by the word "or," the verb should take the form of the noun closest to it.
- Mass nouns, like "water" or "mud" are neither singular nor plural.
- Mass nouns represent a generic, unknown amount of whatever they are.
- [The subject baggage is a mass noun, so the verb was is singular.]
- Amounts take singular verbs because they are treated as units, which are singular nouns.
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- Some nouns are mass or non-count nouns, meaning that they are neither singular nor plural.
- Mass nouns always take singular verbs, even if the noun represents an object that may be plural.
- If a sentence has a compound subject, you should use a plural verb even if all the components of the subject are singular nouns.
- When two nouns differing in number are joined by the word "or," the verb should take the form of the noun closest to it.
- "Characteristics," thus, is the noun that should agree with the sentence's verb.
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