Apart from a large amount of, what else is used to modify uncountable nouns?

Apart from a large amount of, what else is used to modify uncountable nouns?


In most cases, a large deal of, a plenty of and a good supply of modify uncountable nouns, such as a plenty of water, a deal of time, but they can also modify countable nouns, such as a plenty of men



A plury of countable or uncountable
No, please don't talk nonsense


We have plenty of food (money / water / time, etc.)



Is it a countable noun or both
(1) Please of (2) a lot of with countable n. or uncountable noun, or both
What's the English word for "spend time / money"? I only know spend, cost and, by the way, that's to decorate time, that's to decorate money, that can both spend time and money
By the way, is it OK to add countable n or uncountable noun?


Countable or uncountable will do
There are plenty of students in the school
there is plenty of water in the bottle
Pay for
spend
cost
Time: take
spend



Can uncountable nouns be added after a number of


A number of means "many...", followed by a plural noun
A number of students were absent from the meeting.
Many students were absent from the meeting
Additive uncountable noun



Is a bit of, a great deal of, a number of and (a) plenty of countable nouns or both


1. Modify countable nouns: many, fee, a fee, a couple of, several, a large / small number of = large / small numbers of, a good / great many = many, a + noun singular, a large / small quantity of = large / small quantities of



The number of the class is 20 is the number countable or uncountable
Are abstract nouns countable or uncountable


Number is a countable noun
Abstract nouns are generally uncountable, but high school has the grammar of abstract noun concretization, which can be counted when it comes to people or things
Such as a failure a failure a belief a person's faith



What's the difference between the amount of and the number of?


The former is followed by uncountable nouns, and the latter by countable nouns



The syntax of a number of and the number of must be clear!


There are two similar phrases in English: a number of and the number of. When they modify nouns as subjects, the number of predicates is different. (1) a number of is a quantifier phrase, which means "many..." The head word is the plural that this phrase modifies



A number of modifies a countable noun or an uncountable noun


A number of means: many, followed by a plural noun, and the predicate verb is plural
eg.A number of students were absent from the meeting.
Many students were absent from the meeting



Are large amounts of and large amounts of respectively countable or uncountable


Uncountable