Grammatical
part of speech that names a person, animal, object, quality, idea, or time. Nouns can refer to objects such as
house,
tree (
concrete nouns); specific persons and places such as
John Alden, the
White House (
proper nouns); ideas such as
love,
anger (
abstract nouns). In English many simple words are both noun and verb (
jump,
reign,
rain). Adjectives are sometimes used as nouns (a
local man, one of the
locals).
A common noun does not begin with a capital letter (
child,
cat), whereas a proper noun does, because it is the name of a particular person, animal, or place (
Jane,
Rover,
Norfolk). A concrete noun refers to things that can be sensed (
dog,
box), whereas an abstract noun relates to generalizations abstracted from life as we observe it (
fear,
condition,
truth). A
countable noun can have a plural form (
book:
books), while an
uncountable noun or mass noun cannot (
dough). Many English nouns can be used both countably and uncountably (
wine: Have some
wine; it's one of our best
wines). A
collective noun is singular in form but refers to a group (
flock,
group,
committee), and a
compound noun is made up of two or more nouns (
teapot,
baseball team,
car-factory strike committee). A
verbal noun is formed from a verb as a gerund or otherwise (
build:
building;
regulate:
regulation).
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