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  1. 21 de nov. de 2021 · Traditionally, it is not countable, and most dictionaries list it as such. However, the Merriam-Webster thesaurus (although not the Merriam-Webster dictionary) does have an entry for homeworks . Moreover, the plural form is used by at least some groups of educated native speakers.

  2. 9 de may. de 2021 · When is it acceptable to use "a homework?". As an ESL practitioner, I had to look it up, and found a source which says "a homework" is only acceptable among native speakers. So, should non-native speakers just stick to "homework" as uncountable?

  3. Names for groups or collections of things: furniture, equipment, rubbish, luggage. Other common uncountable nouns include: accommodation, baggage, homework, knowledge, money, permission, research, traffic, travel. These nouns are not used with a/an or numbers and are not used in the plural.

  4. GRAMÁTICA: Countable or uncountable? • Homework is an uncountable noun and is not used in the plural. You say: The teacher gave us a lot of homework. Don’t say: The teacher gave us a lot of homeworks. • Homework is always followed by a singular verb. The homework was really difficult.

  5. 19 de feb. de 2019 · Usually uncountable. Most people would not say "I have two homeworks". Instead, you would say "I have two homework assignments". You also would not say "I have many homeworks". Instead, you would say "I have a lot of homework".

  6. Homework is uncountable. "I have a lot of homework." "I only have a little homework." "All of my teachers gave me homework to do this weekend." "One of my teachers gave me a lot of homework but the others didn't give me any homework at all."

  7. In Bulgarian both "homework" and "work" are countable. Why are they uncountable in English then? What is the difference in meaning that makes that happen?

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