(NOUN) What is Noun?
A noun is a special kind of word, called a 'part of speech.
Noun are words that name a person, place, thing, or idea.
Here are some examples of nouns. 'Girl' and 'boy' are words that name people. 'Doctor,'
'fireman,' and 'artist' are nouns, too. This artist is a penguin. 'Penguin' is also a noun!
Nouns can also name places. 'Playground' and 'park' are nouns that name places. Words like
'country' and 'state' name places, too.
There are many, many words to name the things that are around us. Anything you can touch,
see, hold, or feel is a noun - a type of noun called a 'concrete noun. '
Finally, there are nouns for ideas. These are a little trickier to understand, as we
can't see or touch them, but even though we can't touch them we still need names for things
like love, honesty, and happiness. These are called 'abstract nouns. '
Nouns can be singular, like if there is only one dog, or they can be plural, if there are
several dogs.
The last thing is the difference between common nouns
and proper nouns. Common nouns are nouns that are general, or could belong to more than
one item. Baby is a common noun. This is a baby, and this is a baby. But these babies
have proper names. If I say that this baby is named Eman and this baby is named Emma,
those are the proper nouns that name each specific baby. Proper nouns are special. We
show that they are special by always using capital letters for proper nouns.
Various Types of Noun:
Proper Noun
Common Noun
Abstract Noun
concrete Noun
Countable Noun
Non-countable Noun
collective Noun
Compound Noun
Proper Noun:
A formal person, place or thing is a name which alludes just to a solitary individual, spot, or thing and there is no basic name for it. In composed English, a formal person, place or thing consistently starts with capital letters.
Eg: Melbourne (it alludes to just a single specific city), Steve (alludes to a specific individual),
Australia (there could be no other nation named Australia; this name is fixed for just a single country).
More Examples of Proper Noun
Common Noun:
A typical thing is a name for something which is basic for some things, individual, or spots. It's anything but a specific kind of things, individual, or spots.
Eg: Country (it can allude to any country, nothing specifically), city (it can allude to any city like Melbourne, Mumbai, Toronto, and so on however nothing specifically).
Thus, a typical thing is a word that demonstrates an individual, place, thing, and so forth As a rule and a formal person, place or thing is a particular one of those.
More Examples of Common Noun
Abstract Noun:
A theoretical thing is a word for something that can't be seen yet is there. It has no actual presence. By and large, it alludes to thoughts, characteristics, and conditions.
Eg: Truth, lies, bliss, distress, time, kinship, humor, nationalism, and so on
Theoretical Noun models in sentences
concrete Noun:
A substantial thing is the specific inverse of unique thing. It alludes to the things we see and have actual presence.
Eg: Chair, table, bat, ball, water, cash, sugar, and so forth
Countable Noun:
The things that can be tallied are called countable things. Countable things can take an article: a, an,the.
Eg: Chair, table, bat, ball, and so on (you can say 1 seat, 2 seats, 3 seats – so seats are countable)
Countable Noun models in sentences
Non-countable Noun:
The things that can't be checked are called non-countable things.
Eg: Water, sugar, oil, salt, and so on (you can't say "1 water, 2 water, 3 water" since water isn't countable)
Theoretical things and formal people, places or things are consistently non-countable things, yet normal things and substantial things can be both check and non-tally things.
Non-countable Noun models in sentences
Collective Noun:
An collection is a word for a gathering of things, individuals, or creatures, and so forth
Eg: family, group, jury, dairy cattle, and so on
Aggregate things can be both plural and particular. In any case, Americans like to utilize aggregate things as solitary, however both of the utilizations are right in different pieces of the world.
Compound Noun:
In some cases a few things show up together, or even with different grammatical features, and make colloquial compound things. Informal implies that those things act as a unit and, to a lesser or more noteworthy degree, add up to more than the amount of their parts.
Eg: six-pack, five-year-old, and child in-law, snowball, letter box, and so forth
Capacities o
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