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A cake / some cake / some cakes, much / many
This lesson explains how to use countable and uncountable forms with the words 'cake' and the quantifiers 'a', 'some', 'much', and 'many'. You'll learn when to use 'a cake' (one whole cake), 'some cake' (a quantity of cake, treated as uncountable), 'some cakes' (several whole cakes), and when to use 'much' vs 'many'.
- 'Cake' can be countable (a cake, two cakes) or uncountable (some cake — a portion).
- Use 'a' with singular countable nouns: a cake.
- Use 'some' in affirmative sentences for both uncountable amounts and plural countables: some cake, some cakes.
- Use 'many' with plural countable nouns and 'much' with uncountable nouns (especially in questions and negatives).