In mathematics, when a set is uncountable, it means that it has a cardinality greater than that of the set of natural numbers. For example, the set of real numbers is uncountable because there is no bijection between it and the set of natural numbers. It implies that the set is infinite and dense in some sense.
Yes, the noun 'night' is a countable noun:We spent the night at grandma's house.We spent two nights at grandma's house.
The word daylight is a noun, a common, compound, uncountable, concrete noun; a word for a thing.
The noun 'moonlight' is a common, uncountable, concrete noun; word for the sunlight from the sun reflected to earth from the moon; a word for a thing.
what beautiful weather! because weather is an uncountable name.
Transport is both countable and uncountable as a noun.
countable
Uncountable
uncountable
uncountable
The gerund painting is a countable noun, as in "There are 12 paintings in this room."
few is countable
countable
Countable
The noun 'steel' is an uncountable (mass) noun, a word for a substance.
he asked me if the word fire wood countable or uncountable?
Countable