If it is an abstract concept of education, "education" is an uncountable noun;
"Education" is a countable noun when it means "received education".
Educational English [? Ed. u? Ke? n]? Beauty [? dke? n]?
Noun education; Cultivation; Pedagogy; Training.
Nouns can be divided into countable nouns and uncountable nouns according to their countability. Countable nouns refer to nouns that can be divided into individuals and directly counted by numbers, such as desks, kites, girls, rooms, schools, etc.
Countable nouns refer to people or things that can be counted by numbers and divided into individuals; So it has a plural form, and when its plural form is used as the subject in a sentence, the predicate of the sentence also uses the plural form.
Uncountable nouns refer to things that cannot be counted by numbers and can not be divided into individual concepts, states, qualities, feelings or substances. Generally, there is no plural form, only a singular form, and it cannot be placed in front of the indefinite article a/an to express its individual meaning. It is usually used with noun phrases, which is equivalent to numerals+(quantifiers)+nouns in Chinese. The meaning of quantifiers depends on the collocation with specific nouns. However, when uncountable nouns indicate "one kind, one field, one time", "one time" and a certain emotion, and when uncountable nouns are used to refer to something or a product or work that causes this emotion, the indefinite article a/an can also be used directly in front of it. The uncountable noun "uncountable noun" is usually abbreviated as un. When uncountable nouns use plural forms, their meanings will change.