0 a noun that can be used in the singular and the plural: --
Count nouns are shown in this dictionary with [C].
The discussion emphasizes the point that no social practice (as a count noun) in real time is an act of its own; its intersection with other practices is inevitable.
But since a count noun refers to a bounded whole, an arbitrary limited portion of an instance does not itself constitute a valid instance of the count-noun category.
Experiment 2 provided a further test of the second proposal by checking whether three-year-old children's attention to shape is due to the use of a count noun syntactic frame.
In practice this concerns whether the nominal is a count noun, a mass noun, or a proper noun.
The word, being a count noun, was extended to other objects of the same kind as the target object.
For them it's mainly a count noun, in which the singular denotes a pickled cucumber, and the plural, multiples of them.
This is useful, for instance, to express the fact that every requires a singular count noun as its head.
In this case the count noun lake is used to describe the body of water in question.