Countable and Uncountable Nouns Worksheet Grade 6

Countable and Uncountable Nouns Worksheet Grade 6
Countable and Uncountable Nouns Worksheet Grade 6

Countable and Uncountable Nouns Worksheet Grade 6

Class 6EnglishEnglish GrammarFree DownloadPDF
Ranjana Pathania
Ranjana PathaniaVisit Profile
I am an educator with over 10 years of teaching experience across CBSE schools, specializing in English, Science, Hindi and History from pre - primary to class 10 and NTT (nursery teachers training) students. A TESOL-certified professional with qualifications in LL.B, B.Ed, and M.Ed, I currently empowers students as a Public Speaking Coach at PlanetSpark, nurturing confident communicators.

Noun Sense: Countable and Uncountable Practice for Grade 6
 


This interactive worksheet helps Grade 6 learners confidently distinguish between countable and uncountable nouns. From sorting lists and correcting mistakes to completing sentences using quantity words, this grammar resource is packed with contextual practice and vocabulary enhancement.
 


Why Practice Countable and Uncountable Nouns?
 


Understanding these two noun types is critical for correct grammar usage and meaningful writing. This worksheet builds:
1. Clarity in using nouns with correct quantity words like *much*, *many*, *some*, *any*.
2. Skills to spot and fix common noun form errors.
3. Sentence fluency through fill-in-the-blanks and editing exercises.
4. Awareness of nouns that follow different grammar rules.
 


What’s Inside This Worksheet?
 


🖍️ Exercise 1 – Underline or Circle 
Students read 9 real-life sentences and underline the countable nouns while circling the uncountable ones. (e.g., *rice, water, shells, books*).

📋 Exercise 2 – Sort and Classify 
From a mixed list of 16 nouns, learners sort them under Countable or Uncountable categories. (e.g., *pencil*, *money*, *sugar*, *books*).

✏️ Exercise 3 – Fill in the Blanks 
Using words like *many, much, a few, some, any*, students complete 9 contextual sentences involving both noun types.

✅ Exercise 4 – Choose the Correct Word 
Students tick the correct word (*much* or *many*) in 10 sentences — e.g., *There isn’t (much/many) milk in the fridge.*

🔍 Exercise 5 – Error Correction 
Each of the 10 sentences contains a noun-related error. Learners identify and rewrite the incorrect usage (e.g., *many rice → much rice*).
 


✅ Answer Key
 

Exercise 1
Countable (underline): vegetables, elephants, biscuits, books, shells, pen, children 
Uncountable (circle): rice, water, juice, sugar, information, sand, paper, mud

Exercise 2
Countable: pencil, apple, chair, banana, books, birds, chairs, vegetables 
Uncountable: milk, sugar, rice, salt, water, money

Exercise 3 
1. much 
2. many 
3. some 
4. any 
5. many 
6. much 
7. any 
8. some 
9. much

Exercise 4 
1. much 
2. many 
3. much 
4. many 
5. many 
6. much 
7. much 
8. many 
9. much 
10. many

Exercise 5 (Corrected Words) 
1. many → much 
2. a information → some information 
3. many bread → some bread 
4. many money → much money 
5. much birds → many birds 
6. an advice → some advice 
7. few milk → little milk 
8. furnitures → furniture 
9. a paper → some paper 
10. many rice → much rice

Support correct noun usage and quantity agreement with engaging grammar practice.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Countable nouns can be counted and have plurals, while uncountable nouns refer to substances or ideas that cannot be counted.

Yes, some uncountable nouns like 'hair' or 'work' can be countable depending on the context.

They should remember that uncountable nouns do not use 'a' or 'an' and usually don’t take plural forms.