Contents

English

Etymology

un- + countable (count + -able)

Noun

Singular uncountable

Plural uncountables

uncountable (plural uncountables)

  1. (linguistics) An uncountable noun.

Adjective

uncountable (not comparable)

Positive uncountable

Comparative not comparable

Superlative none (absolute)

  1. So many as to be incapable of being counted.
    The reasons for our failure were as uncountable as the grains of sand on a beach.
  2. (mathematics) Incapable of being put into one-to-one correspondence with the natural numbers or any subset thereof.
    Cantor’s “diagonal proof” shows that the set of real numbers is uncountable.
  3. (grammar, of a noun) Describes a meaning of a noun that cannot be used freely with numbers or the indefinite article, and which therefore takes no plural form. Example: information.
    Many languages do not distinguish countable nouns from uncountable nouns.
    One meaning in law of the supposedly uncountable noun "information" is used in the plural and is countable.

Antonyms

Hypernyms

Derived terms

See also

 

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4 Score and 7 Interceptors - ArmsControlWonk.com
news.google.com
4 Score and 7 Interceptors

ArmsControlWonk.com

Basically scores means uncountable , not that it matters as the real number of interceptors would be between 0 and 300. (Actually Russian S-400 system is ...
Google News Search: uncountable,
Wed Sep 23 00:06:31 2009