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Common Noun

This document discusses common nouns. It defines a common noun as an everyday noun that is not capitalized unless starting a sentence or part of a name. Common nouns refer to general people, places, things or ideas, while proper nouns refer to specific examples. There are five types of common nouns: countable nouns that can be singular or plural, uncountable nouns used only in singular form, collective nouns that represent groups, concrete nouns referring to physical things, and abstract nouns referring to non-physical concepts.

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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
627 views2 pages

Common Noun

This document discusses common nouns. It defines a common noun as an everyday noun that is not capitalized unless starting a sentence or part of a name. Common nouns refer to general people, places, things or ideas, while proper nouns refer to specific examples. There are five types of common nouns: countable nouns that can be singular or plural, uncountable nouns used only in singular form, collective nouns that represent groups, concrete nouns referring to physical things, and abstract nouns referring to non-physical concepts.

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Common Noun

The standard definition of a noun is that it names a person, place, or thing. But that is
not all.

A noun can refer to anything that is living or non-living, animate or inanimate.


It can also name a place or an abstract idea.

A common noun is your everyday noun, like road, cat, love, mother, or park. They are
not capitalized unless they start a sentence or are a part of a name, like Aunt Dorothy or
General Lee.

A common noun is the more general version of a proper noun which names a specific
living or non-living thing, place, or idea. The proper noun would include the names of
months, days, organizations, people and their titles, places, books, plays, movies,
newspapers, and more.

Types of Common Nouns

There are five general types of common nouns: countable, noncountable, collective,
concrete, and abstract. We will look at each one of these and explain the rules of usage.

i. Countable nouns can be both singular and plural and are able to be shown with
a number, like five cats or a hundred miles. A singular countable noun must be
preceded by a determiner. This would be a word that clarifies, like: a, an, the,
that, this, one, our, my, or which. Examples include: The dolphin is gray., My
car is red. and Which book is yours?
ii. Uncountable nouns are only used in the singular tense and you can not use a
or an with them. Certain quantifiers can be used such as: any, some, or much.
Examples include: coffee, oil, air, happiness, sugar, water, money, and luggage.
Sentences that show uncountable nouns are: There is too much furniture here.
and I need a lot of love.
iii. Collective nouns represent a group of things. The singular use of them would
refer to one unit or group and the plural would refer to more than one unit.
Examples include: family, class, team, department, faculty, jury, school, society,
or troupe.
iv. Concrete nouns represent something physical that can be experienced through
the senses. They can be common, proper, singular, plural, countable,
noncountable, or collective. Examples include: fish, song, house, computers, salt,
cheese, Mary Brown, Disneyland, and senate.
v. Abstract nouns refer to things that are not concrete; they can not be seen, felt,
heard, smelled, or tasted. They refer to emotions, ideas, concepts, traits,
experiences, or a state of being. Examples are: love, hatred, trust, deceit, culture,
curiosity, maturity, sympathy, democracy, patience, and peace.

Nouns are basic to sentence structure because they, along with pronouns, provide the
subject of the sentence.

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