19 дек. 2021 г. · The complicated answer is this: it's both. This is because 'cake' has a 'whole countable form'. Let's look in more detail. |
2 мар. 2021 г. · "cake" is countable when you're talking about the physical, discrete items, and it's uncountable when you're talking about it as a substance. |
8 дек. 2005 г. · Cake is both, countable and uncountable. If you refer to the whole cake it's countable (one cake, two cakes, ten cakes). Then if you just want to refer to a ... had cake / a cake [Zero article for Uncountable/countable noun] cake , pie - WordReference Forums cake / pieces of cake [Count or non-count?] cake as an uncountable noun - WordReference Forums Другие результаты с сайта forum.wordreference.com |
cake · . [countable, uncountable] a sweet food made from a mixture of flour, eggs, butter, sugar, etc. that is baked in an oven. · [countable] a food mixture ... |
A dictionary will tell you. Usually dictionaries use symbols [C] for countable and [U] for uncountable. Just a minute. You said cake was uncountable. |
Cake is uncountable in certain cases but countable when we say: She baked some cakes. Roger Woodham replies: ... |
22 мар. 2017 г. · Both: A cake = an entire complete cake (countable) (some) cake = a portion taken from a cake (uncountable). See a translation. |
You are talking about part of a cake, so the noun 'cake' is uncountable. Nouns that are usually uncountable are used as countable nouns when we talk about ... |
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