Types of nouns
Common or proper |
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Common nouns |
Examples |
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• name general persons, places, things, ideas • begin with lowercase |
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Proper nouns |
Examples |
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• name specific persons, places, things, ideas • begin with capital letter |
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Count or noncount (common nouns only) |
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Count nouns |
Examples |
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• name persons, places, things, or ideas that can be counted • have plural forms |
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Noncount nouns |
Examples |
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• name things or abstract ideas that cannot be counted • cannot be made plural |
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Singular or plural (both common and proper) |
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Singular nouns (count and noncount) |
Examples |
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• represent one person, place, thing, or idea |
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Plural nouns (count only) |
Examples |
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• represent more than one person, place, thing, or idea • must be count nouns |
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Specific (definite) or general (indefinite) (count and noncount) |
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Specific nouns |
Examples |
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• name persons, places, things, or ideas that can be identified within a group of the same type |
The students in Professor Martin’s class should study. The airplane carrying the senator was late. The furniture in the truck was damaged. |
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General nouns |
Examples |
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• name categories of persons, places, things, or ideas (often plural) |
Students should study. Books bridge gaps between cultures. The airplane has made commuting between cities easy. [Airplane as a class of transportation] |