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I have come across some words which are mass nouns in English, but seem to be countable nouns in Portuguese. Consider the following examples:

Portuguese: Mostre-me as informações

English: Show me the information


Portuguese: Dê-me alguns conselhos

English: Give me some advice

Is this an overly small sample size, or is it so that Portuguese makes greater use of countable nouns than does English? What is more, how can one decipher whether a noun should be mass or countable?

3 Answers 3

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I have good news: there’s much in common between Portuguese and English when it comes to mass and count nouns. For instance many names such as

farinha, vinho, marmelada, sopa, carne, couro, tecido,

are count nouns if you mean varieties, but are mass nouns if you mean quantity of one variety. So you can say:

Countable: temos aqui muitas farinhas: farinha de trigo tipo 65, farinha de trigo integral, farinha de centeio, etc.

Mass: temos aqui muita farinha.

Countable: temos duas marmeladas: esta é mais doce do que aquela.

Mass: há aqui imensa marmelada: eu não conseguiria comê-la toda nem em três anos

As you can see in the examples above, you can tell a count noun by the use of a number (duas marmeladas) or muitas/muitos (many); and a mass noun by the use of muito/muita/imenso + noun (a lot of + noun).

Now there is a lot in common between Portuguese and English when it comes to count and mass nouns, but there are lots of differences too. And if you want to master them, I have only um conselho: practice makes perfect. No set of rules will do. Keep reading and chatting in Portuguese, and you’ll get a better and better feel of how things work. For instance, vinho works just as wine:

Temos aqui cinco vinhos diferentes [varieties, countable]; temos muito vinho [mass], suficiente para embebedar um regimento.

But cerveja is more complicated. It can be used as vinho in the example above, but uma cerveja can also mean one unit of beer (a glass, a bottle, whatever). So três cevejas diferentes will mean three types of beer, but you can go to a bar and ask for três cervejas, meaning three units. Of course, if they have several brands or units of different sizes, that request will lead to a long conversation if the barman is not too busy. It’s the exact same thing with sumo (Portugal) or suco (Brazil).

Then, as in Enlgish, you have names, such as coelho, pato, sardinha, carapau, which are mass nouns if you mean their meat as food, and are count nouns if you mean individual animals. It works in the same way for trees and their wood:

Em Setúbal podes comer a sardinha e o carapau que quiseres [mass, as much sardine and horse mackerel as you like; it could also be interpreted as count nouns, the one sardine you choose, but that’s not what it’s meant]. Estou cheio: comi seis sardinhas e três carapaus.

A mobília deste hotel é toda de nogueira (walnut wood): foram precisas 350 nogueiras (walnut trees) para a fazer.

Many abstract nouns are typically used as mass nouns only: paciência, caridade, compaixão, pobreza. There are also many, such as alegria, tristeza, ódio, amor, esperança, progresso, that can be mass nouns as in English; but can also be count nouns generally meaning an instance of what the mass noun means:

Havia muita alegria naquela casa. Este filho deu-me muitas alegrias.

muito ódio no mundo. O João foi consumido pelos seus ódios.

Este filho deu-me muita alegria is not that different from este filho deu-me muitas alegrias; muitas alegrias implies more explicitly that you were made happy on various occasions. Each of the seus ódios would be the hate he felt for a particular person or thing. But generally you don’t say três ódios, cinco tristezas, etc. They’re only loosely countable.

Coming at last to your examples, you got conselho exactly right: it translates best as piece of advice:

Tenho um conselho para te dar; tenho dois conselhos para te dar.

Informação is more complicated. It can definitely be used as mass noun. The plural informações is very common, but often it could be replaced by the singular without change of meaning. And phrases such as duas informações, três informações, in Portugal at least, are rare. If you are doing detective work asking around for information about someone or something, the plural is the more natural option:

Andou aqui um fulano a pedir informações a teu respeito.

But one you’ve collected all that information, singular and plural can both be used:

Aqui está a informação que consegui recolher sobre o Sr. X.

Aqui estão as informações que consegui recolher sobre o Sr. X

You wouldn’t use the plural option if you had put the information together into a single structured report. But the singular could be used whether you had a structured report or just a collection of loose pieces of information. If you’re talking about a structured body of information, say as that released by an official statistics office, you’ll use the singular.

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  • Em "duas farinhas", "duas marmeladas", "cinco vinhos", os nomes não são contáveis, embora possa parecer contra-intuitivo, já que estamos a contar qualquer coisa. Gramática da Irmandade, 8.2.7 Operações (de determinação) sobre não contáveis
    – Artefacto
    Commented Feb 8, 2016 at 23:24
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    @Artefacto Nos exemplos do teu link não se conta nada. Nos meus conta-se: temos cinco vinhos. Tínhamos, o Lagoa já se bebeu todo, agora só temos quatro.
    – Jacinto
    Commented Feb 8, 2016 at 23:41
  • Hmmm... A minha ideia foi a de que não existe nenhuma diferença substancial entre os vinhos da Lagoa e os três vinhos da Lagoa. Mas vendo mais ao de perto, nada lá diz que o núcleo nominal em os vinhos da Lagoa é não contável. A exposição da Gramática do Português parece corroborar a tua análise (só admite muitos e numerais cardinais comuns em sintgmas nominais contáveis, ao contrário de muito que só admite aos não contáveis) (figuras das páginas 756/757)
    – Artefacto
    Commented Feb 8, 2016 at 23:55
  • @Artefacto No caso de os vinhos de Lagoa concordo que não tem que ser contável. As águas do Tejo certamente não é contável. Esse critério, cardinais e muitos versus muito foi precisamente o que eu segui.
    – Jacinto
    Commented Feb 9, 2016 at 0:05
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Just as someone who is studying English as a foreign language has to be told that "news", "information", "advice", etc, are uncountable nouns, those who are studying Portuguese as a foreign language have to be told that such words are countable.

  • "Tu recebeste alguma informação a respeito desse assunto?"
  • "Eu recebi todas as informações necessárias."
  • "Se conselho fosse bom ninguém dava, vendia."
  • "Ela vive me dando conselhos."
  • "Alguma notícia boa nos jornais?"
  • "Eu li todas as notícias do jornal de hoje."
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  • Ok, but are there any examples of mass nouns in Portuguese? Or are countable nouns generally preferred?
    – Mr Chasi
    Commented Feb 8, 2016 at 18:31
  • @MrChasi There aren't many differences between Portuguese and English when it comes to countables and uncountables. So much so that all you have to do is learn the exceptions.
    – Centaurus
    Commented Feb 8, 2016 at 23:49
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There are plenty of mass nouns in Portuguese, meaning non-countable nouns (not referring to discrete, individualizable entities) that refer to substances (Gramática do Português published by Gulbenkian, p. 715, also p. 744). There also non-countable nouns that do not refer to substances (amor, justiça, liberdade, which refer to abstract entities).

There are plenty of examples (água, ouro, vinho), and in some cases countable nouns can be recategorized as massive nouns and vice-versa (Maria Mateus and others' Grammar, 6th ed., p. 220):

Roubaram-me as pratas.
Trouxe três sumos.
Comi cabrito ao almoço.
O peixe faz bem à saúde.

Prata and sumo are generally uncountable, and cabrito and peixe are generally countable.

It's possible that mass nounds are more frequent in English, but arriving at that conclusion would require more than 2 examples.

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