Noun
Noun
Noun
Types of Nouns
Common nouns and proper nouns, concrete nouns and abstract nouns, countable and uncountable,
collective nouns, compound nouns
1) Common Nouns
Common nouns refer to people, places and things in general like chair or dog. Any noun that is not
a name is a common noun. Words like car, dog, teacher, house, water, music, plane, sea—they are all
"general" nouns and NOT the name of some person or place.
2) Proper Nouns
Examples: Jane, Thailand, Sunday, James Bond, Einstein, Superman, Game of Thrones, Shakespeare
Shirley, Mr Jeckyll, Thailand, April, Sony
Let me introduce you to Mary.
The capital of Italy is Rome.
He is the chairman of the British Broadcasting Corporation.
I was born in November.
3) Countable Nouns and Uncountable Nouns
Why do some nouns have no plural?
dog/dogs, rice, hair(s)
Have you got some money?
Air-conditioners use a lot of electricity.
Do you have any work for me to do?
Many Asians eat rice.
dog, cat, animal, man, person, bottle, box, coin, note, dollar, cup, plate, fork, table, chair,
suitcase, bag.
Uncountable Nouns
We can use some and any with uncountable nouns: music, art, love, happiness, advice,
information, news, furniture, luggage, rice, sugar, butter, water, electricity, gas, power, money,
currency.
I've got some money.
Have you got any rice?
We can use a little and much with uncountable nouns:
I've got a little money.
I haven't got much rice.
Nouns that can be Countable and Uncountable
Sometimes, the same noun can be countable and uncountable, often with a change of
meaning.
Countable Uncountable
The US dollar and pound sterling are currency The expression gained wider currency
important currencies. after 2001.
There are two hairs in my coffee! hair I don't have much hair.
There are two lights in our bedroom. light Close the curtain. There's too much
light!
Shhhhh! I thought I heard a noise. noise It's difficult to work when there is so
There are so many different noises in the much noise.
city.
Have you got a paper to read? (newspaper) paper I want to draw a picture. Have you got
Hand me those student papers. some paper?
Our house has seven rooms. room Is there room for me to sit here?
We had a great time at the party. time Have you got time for a cup of coffee?
How many times have I told you no?
Macbeth is one of Shakespeare's greatest work I have no money. I need work!
works.
4) Plural Nouns
This is a small group of nouns that are always plural, such as trousers, boxers, headphones,
belongings. With Plural-Only Nouns Mini Quiz
5) Compound Nouns
A compound noun is a noun that is made with two or more words. Most compound nouns are
[noun + noun] or [adjective + noun].
tennis shoe, six-pack, bedroom. Compound nouns have three different forms:
open or spaced - space between words (bus stop)
hyphenated - hyphen between words (mother-in-law)
closed or solid - no space or hyphen between words (football)
Examples: cat food, blackboard, breakfast, full moon, washing machine, software
Can we use the swimming pool?
They stop work at sunset.
Don't forget that check-out is at 12 noon.
noun + noun bus stop Is this the bus stop for the number 12
bus?
singular plural
Some compound nouns have no obvious base word and you may need to consult a dictionary to find
the plural: higher-ups, also-rans, go-betweens, has-beens, good-for-nothings, grown-ups
6) Concrete Nouns
Concrete nouns are physical things that you can touch.
Examples: man, rice, head, car, furniture, mobile phone
How many stars are there in the universe?
Have you met James Bond?
Pour the water down the drain.
7) Abstract Nouns
Abstract nouns are the opposite of concrete nouns. They are things that you cannot touch. Abstract
nouns are ideas, concepts and feelings.
Examples: happiness, courage, danger, truth
He has great strength.
Who killed President Kennedy is a real mystery.
Sometimes it takes courage to tell the truth.
Their lives were full of sadness.
8) Noun as Adjective
Sometimes we use a noun to describe another noun. In that case, the first noun is "acting as" an
adjective.
love story, tooth-brush, bathroom
The "noun as adjective" always comes first
a race horse is a horse that runs in races
a horse race is a race for horses
a boat race is a race for boats
a love story is a story about love
a war story is a story about war
a tennis ball is a ball for playing tennis
tennis shoes are shoes for playing tennis
a computer exhibition is an exhibition of computers
a bicycle shop is a shop that sells bicycles
noun as noun
adjective
history teacher
ticket office
race horse
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