Is "education" a count noun?

"Education", like many abstract nouns, can be used in both countable and uncountable forms. They are most often used as countable nouns when speaking about a specific entity that is not abstract. Here are some examples of these abstract nouns being used in both forms.

We are taught that love is one of the greatest emotions.
I can't eat at diners; I just have a love for finer food.

Everything can be completed with enough time.
There is a time for laughter, even at a solemn event.

If you don't want to end up like your father, remember the benefits of education.
You'll need an education if you don't want to work at fast food for the rest of your life.

Any time you want to refer to abstracts like this with specificity, you'll find them commonly used in countable forms.


Some of the answers above seem to assume that if an indefinite article is used with a noun, it must be a count noun usage. However, there may or may not be the possibility of using other count quantifiers / plural inflections with such words in given contexts:

I just have a love for finer food.

There are two great loves in my life: fine food and classical music.

*I have loves for finer food and classical music.

*She received three educations.

In an article at Useful English is found:

In formal writing and literary works the article a/an may be used with some uncountable abstract nouns to show an unusual or temporary aspect of something. The indefinite article here has similar meaning to: such, certain, special, peculiar.

Compare these examples.

Formal / literary style:

The director spoke at the meeting today with an enormous enthusiasm.

A paralyzing horror overwhelmed him.

She smiled at us with an unusual friendliness.

Standard / everyday style:

The director spoke at the meeting today with great enthusiasm.

He was paralyzed with horror.

She smiled at us with unusual friendliness.

Accepting this, the 'count / noncount' divide is blurred in that an indefinite article is not proof of a count usage.

That having been said, I think that the answers given by Cord and Flater above, with education being considered countified in the sense of 'instance of', fit better here.


Yes, it is basically an uncountable, as in the first sentence, but can be understood as short for "a course of education" when applied to individuals as opposed for example to government policy. So the formation of the type, "he got an education in/from" is very common.

@Flater answered while I was writing, expanding the word into "type of" rather than "course of", but it's the same principle.