What is a Noun?
Late last year our neighbours bought
a goat.
Portia White was
an opera singer.
The bus inspector looked
at all the passengers' passes.
According to Plutarch,
the library at Alexandria was
destroyed in 48 B.C.
Philosophy is of
little comfort to the starving.
A noun can
function in a sentence as a subject, a direct object, anindirect object, a subject complement, an object complement, anappositive, an adjective or an adverb.
Many common nouns, like "engineer" or
"teacher," can refer to men or women. Once, many English nouns would
change form depending on their gender -- for example, a man was called an
"author" while a woman was called an "authoress" -- but
this use of gender-specific nouns is
very rare today. Those that are still used occasionally tend to refer to
occupational categories, as in the following sentences.
David Garrick was a very prominent
eighteenth-century actor.
Sarah Siddons was at the height of her
career as an actress in the 1780s.
The manager was trying to write a want
ad, but he couldn't decide whether he was advertising for a "waiter"
or a "waitress"
Most nouns
change their form to indicate number by adding "-s" or
"-es", as illustrated in the following pairs of sentences:
When Matthew was small he rarely told
the truth if he thought he was going to be punished.
Many people do not believe that truths are
self-evident.
As they walked through the silent house,
they were startled by an unexpected echo.
I like to shout into the quarry and
listen to the echoes that return.
He tripped over a box left
carelessly in the hallway.
Since we are moving, we will need
many boxes.
There are other
nouns which form the plural by changing the last letter before
adding "s". Some words ending in "f" form the plural by
deleting "f" and adding "ves," and words ending in
"y" form the plural by deleting the "y" and adding
"ies," as in the following pairs of sentences:
The harbour at Marble Mountain
has one wharf.
There are several wharves in
Halifax Harbour .
The vacation my grandparents won
includes trips to twelve European cities.
The children circled around the
headmaster and shouted, "Are you a mouse or a man?"
The audience was shocked when all five
men admitted that they were afraid of mice.
Other nouns form
the plural irregularly. If English is your first language, you probably know
most of these already: when in doubt, consult a good dictionary.
In the possessive case, a noun or pronoun changes its form to show that it
owns or is closely related to something else. Usually, nouns become possessive
by adding a combination of an apostrophe and the letter "s."
You can form the
possessive case of a singular noun that does not end in
"s" by adding an apostrophe and "s," as in the following
sentences:
The red suitcase is Cassandra's.
The only luggage that was lost was
the prime minister's.
The exhausted recruits were woken before
dawn by the drill sergeant's screams.
The miner's face was
covered in coal dust.
You can form the
possessive case of a singular noun that ends in "s" by adding an
apostrophe alone or by adding an apostrophe and "s," as in the
following examples:
The bus's seats are
very uncomfortable.
The bus' seats are very
uncomfortable.
The film crew accidentally crushed
the platypus's eggs.
The film crew accidentally crushed
the platypus' eggs.
Felicia Hemans's poetry was
once more popular than Lord Byron's.
Felicia Hemans' poetry was
once more popular than Lord Byron's.
You can form the
possessive case of a plural noun that does not end in "s" by adding
an apostrophe and a "s," as in the following examples:
The children's mittens
were scattered on the floor of the porch.
The sheep's pen was
mucked out every day.
Since we have a complex appeal process,
a jury's verdict is not always final.
The men's hockey team
will be playing as soon as thewomen's team is finished.
The hunter followed the moose's trail
all morning but lost it in the afternoon.
You can form the
possessive case of a plural noun that does end in
"s" by adding an apostrophe:
The concert was interrupted by the dogs' barking,
the ducks'quacking, and the babies' squalling.
The janitors' room is
downstairs and to the left.
My uncle spent many hours trying to
locate the squirrels' nest.
The archivist quickly finished repairing
the diaries' bindings.
Religion is usually the subject of
the roommates' many late night debates.
When you read the following sentences, you will notice that a noun
in the possessive case frequently functions as an adjective modifying another
noun:
The miner's face was
covered in coal dust.
Here the
possessive noun "miner's" is used to modify the noun "face"
and together with the article "the," they make up
the noun phrasethat is the sentence's subject.
The concert was interrupted by the dogs' barking,
the ducks'quacking, and the babies' squalling.
In this
sentence, each possessive noun modifies a gerund. The possessive noun "dogs"'
modifies "barking," "ducks"' modifies "quacking,"
and "babies"' modifies "squalling."
The film crew accidentally crushed
the platypus's eggs.
In this example
the possessive noun "platypus's" modifies the noun "eggs"
and the noun phrase "the platypus's eggs" is the direct object of
the verb "crushed."
My uncle spent many hours trying to
locate the squirrels' nest.
In this sentence
the possessive noun "squirrels"' is used to modify the noun
"nest" and the noun phrase "the squirrels' nest" is theobject of the infinitive phrase "to locate."
There are many different types of nouns. As you know, you
capitalise some nouns, such as "Canada " or "Louise,"
and do not capitalise others, such as "badger" or "tree"
(unless they appear at the beginning of a sentence). In fact, grammarians have
developed a whole series of noun types, including the proper noun, the common
noun, the concrete noun, the abstract noun, the countable noun (also called the
count noun), the non-countable noun (also called the mass noun), and the
collective noun. You should note that a noun will belong to more than one type:
it will be proper or common, abstract or concrete, and countable
or non-countable or collective.
If you are interested in the details of these different types, you
can read about them in the following sections.
You always write a proper noun with
a capital letter, since the noun represents the name of a specific person,
place, or thing. The names of days of the week, months, historical documents,
institutions, organisations, religions, their holy texts and their adherents
are proper nouns. A proper noun is the opposite of a common noun
In each of the
following sentences, the proper nouns are highlighted:
The Marroons were
transported from Jamaica and
forced to build the fortifications in Halifax .
Many people dread Monday mornings.
Beltane is
celebrated on the first of May.
Abraham appears in
the Talmud and in the Koran.
Last year, I had a Baptist,
a Buddhist, and a Gardnerian Witch as roommates.
A common noun is a noun
referring to a person, place, or thing in a general sense -- usually, you
should write it with a capital letter only when it begins a sentence. A common
noun is the opposite of a proper noun.
In each of the
following sentences, the common nouns arehighlighted:
According to the sign, the
nearest town is 60 miles away.
All the gardens in
the neighbourhood were invaded by beetlesthis summer.
I don't understand why some people insist
on having six different kinds of mustard in
their cupboards.
The road crew was
startled by the sight of three large moosecrossing
the road.
Many child-care workers are
underpaid.
Sometimes you
will make proper nouns out of common nouns, as in the following examples:
The tenants in the Garnet Apartments are
appealing the large and sudden increase in their rent.
The meals in the Bouncing Bean Restaurant are
less expensive than meals in ordinary restaurants.
Many witches refer to the Renaissance as
the Burning Times.
The Diary of Anne Frank is
often a child's first introduction to the history of the Holocaust.
A concrete noun is a
noun which names anything (or anyone) that you can perceive through your
physical senses: touch, sight, taste, hearing, or smell. A concrete noun is the
opposite of a abstract noun.
The highlighted words
in the following sentences are all concrete nouns:
The judge handed
the files to the clerk.
Whenever they take the dog to
the beach, it spends hours chasing waves.
The real estate agent urged
the couple to buy the secondhouse because it had
new shingles.
As the car drove past
the park, the thump of a disco tuneoverwhelmed
the string quartet's rendition of a minuet.
The book binder replaced
the flimsy paper cover with a sturdy, cloth-covered board.
An abstract noun is a
noun which names anything which you can notperceive through your
five physical senses, and is the opposite of a concrete noun. The highlighted words
in the following sentences are all abstract nouns:
Buying the fire extinguisher was
an afterthought.
Tillie is amused by people who are
nostalgic about childhood.
Justice often
seems to slip out of our grasp.
Some scientists believe that schizophrenia is
transmitted genetically.
A countable noun (or count noun) is a noun with both a singular and a
plural form, and it names anything (or anyone) that you can count.
You can make a countable noun plural and attach it to a plural verb in a
sentence. Countable nouns are the opposite of non-countable nouns and
collective nouns.
In each of the
following sentences, the highlighted words are countable
nouns:
We painted the table red
and the chairs blue.
Since he inherited his aunt's library,
Jerome spends everyweekend indexing his books.
Miriam found six silver dollars in
the toe of a sock.
The oak tree lost
three branches in the hurricane.
Over the course of
twenty-seven years, Martha Ballad delivered just over eight
hundred babies.
A non-countable noun (or mass noun) is a noun which does not have a plural
form, and which refers to something that you could (or would) not usually
count. A non-countable noun always takes a singular verb in a sentence.
Non-countable nouns are similar to collective nouns, and are the opposite of
countable nouns.
The highlighted words
in the following sentences are non-countable nouns:
Joseph Priestly discovered oxygen.
The word
"oxygen" cannot normally be made plural.
Oxygen is essential to human life.
Since
"oxygen" is a non-countable noun, it takes the singular verb
"is" rather than the plural verb "are."
We decided to sell the furniture rather
than take it with us when we moved.
You cannot make
the noun "furniture" plural.
The furniture is heaped
in the middle of the room.
Since
"furniture" is a non-countable noun, it takes a singular verb,
"is heaped."
The crew spread the gravel over
the roadbed.
You cannot make
the non-countable noun "gravel" plural.
Gravel is more expensive than I
thought.
Since
"gravel" is a non-countable noun, it takes the singular verb form
"is."
A collective noun is
a noun naming a group of things, animals, or persons. You could count the
individual members of the group, but you usually think of the group as a whole
is generally as one unit. You need to be able to recognise collective nouns in
order to maintain subject-verb agreement. A collective noun is similar to a
non-countable noun, and is roughly the opposite of a countable noun.
In each of the
following sentences, the highlighted word is a collective
noun:
The flock of geese
spends most of its time in the pasture.
The collective
noun "flock" takes the singular verb "spends."
The jury is dining on
take-out chicken tonight.
In this example
the collective noun "jury" is the subject of the singularcompound verb "is dining."
The steering committee meets
every Wednesday afternoon.
Here the
collective noun "committee" takes a singular verb, "meets."
The class was startled
by the bursting light bulb.
In this sentence
the word "class" is a collective noun and takes the singular compound
verb "was startled."
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