NOUNS MADE EASY - PART TWO

April 11, 2016 0 Comments A+ a-





            
1.    Nouns are words that name people, places, things or ideas.
2.   Nouns are probably the most important out of all the parts of speech. (Remember we have eight parts of speech)
3.   Noun Categories help us describe and classify nouns. 


Noun Categories
              
Common Nouns

-    Common nouns are very easy to spot.
-    They are simple words that name general places, ideas, things or nonspecific people.
-    They are not the actual names of places, people or things. For instance ‘boy’ is a common noun but ‘Peter’ is a proper know because it is the specific name of the ‘boy’.
-    Another example would be street which is a common noun however Oxford Street’ is a proper noun because it identifies a specific street by its name.
-    Common Nouns always begin with a lowercase letter unless they begin a sentence.

          Common Noun Examples

-    People: father, mother, girl, boy, toddler, grandmother, businessperson, woman, teacher, student, doctor, patient.
-    Animals: alligator, wolf, bear, mouse, lion, cat, dog, bird.
-    Things: pencil, computer, jacket, shoes, nappies, bag, and iPhone.
-    Places: state, continent, shop, street, city, country, park, zoo.
-    Ideas: love, hate, envy, pride, respect.


PROPER NOUNS

Proper Nouns name SPECIFIC places, things, people or ideas.

Japan, Abdul, Mercedes, Reebok

Proper nouns name things therefore they always start with a capital letter.

They may contain two or more significant words. Each word is then capitalised. The two or more words together are still considered a proper noun.

United States, Bill Gates, Empire State Building
  
            
THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN PROPER NOUNS AND COMMON NOUNS


COMMON NOUNS
PROPER NOUNS
woman
Oprah, Charlotte Bronte
mountain
Mount Everest
street
Oxford Street
country
Malaysia
blog
English Made Easy
http://englishmadeeasywithdallaa.blogspot.com/

places
Euro Disney


CONCTRETE NOUNS

Concrete Nouns name something that physically exists. Something that you can perceive with your five senses. (Touch, smell, taste, see and hear.)

Couscous, Sara, Eiffel Tower

ABSTRACT NOUNS

Abstract nouns are opposite to Concrete nouns. They name something that does not physically exist and something you cannot perceive with your five senses.

courage, envy, fear, beauty, generosity, honesty

COMPOUND NOUNS

Compound nouns are made up of two or more little words.

breakfast, football, bathroom, suitcase

COUNTABLE NOUNS

Countable nouns are nouns that can be counted. They can be both plural and singular forms.

pencil-pencils bed-beds apple-apples

UNCOUNTABLE NOUNS

Uncountable nouns can’t be counted and they only use the singular form.

water, air, milk, rice, couscous, tea, coffee

COLLECTIVE NOUNS

Collective nouns name a group of things as one whole and they are singular.

flock, bundle, orcastra, police, audience

Possessive nouns

Possessive nouns portray ownership of something.

mum’s bike, Jack’s bike, the doctor’s surgery


SINGULAR NOUNS

Singular nouns name a singular person, thing, place or idea.

car, tennis racket, road, girl

PLURAL NOUNS

Plural nouns name more than one person, thing, place or idea.

cars, tennis rackets, roads, girls


          
JJJ

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         image courtesy of  sticky note Supertrooper at FreeDigitalPhotos.net