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What are Nouns?
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<blockquote data-quote="Fırat" data-source="post: 2265" data-attributes="member: 34"><p>The simple definition is: a person, place or thing. </p><p></p><p><span style="color: red">Here are some examples:</span></p><p><span style="color: red"></span></p><p> * <strong>person</strong>: man, woman, teacher, John, Mary</p><p> * <strong>place</strong>: home, office, town, countryside, America</p><p> * <strong>thing</strong>: table, car, banana, money, music, love, dog, monkey</p><p></p><p>The problem with this definition is that it does not explain why "love" is a noun but can also be a verb.</p><p></p><p><span style="color: seagreen"><strong>Another (more complicated) way of recognizing a noun is by its:</strong></span></p><p></p><p> 1. <strong>Ending</strong></p><p> 2. <strong>Position</strong></p><p> 3. <strong>Function</strong></p><p></p><p><span style="color: seagreen"><span style="font-size: 12px"><strong>1. Noun Ending</strong></span></span></p><p></p><p>There are certain word endings that show that a word is a noun, <span style="color: red">for example:</span></p><p></p><p> * -ity > <strong>nationality</strong></p><p> * -ment > <strong>appointment</strong></p><p> * -ness > <strong>happiness</strong></p><p> * -ation > <strong>relation</strong></p><p> * -hood > <strong>childhood</strong></p><p></p><p>But this is not true for the word endings of all nouns. <span style="color: red"><strong>For example</strong></span>, the noun "spoonful" ends in -ful, but the adjective "careful" also ends in -ful.</p><p></p><p><span style="color: seagreen"><span style="font-size: 12px"><strong>2. Position in Sentence</strong></span></span></p><p></p><p>We can often recognise a noun by its position in the sentence.</p><p></p><p><span style="color: seagreen"><strong>Nouns often come after a determiner (a determiner is a word like a, an, the, this, my, such):</strong></span></p><p></p><p> * a <strong>relief</strong></p><p> * an <strong>afternoon</strong></p><p> * the <strong>doctor</strong></p><p> * this <strong>word</strong></p><p> * my <strong>house</strong></p><p> * such <strong>stupidity</strong></p><p></p><p><span style="color: seagreen"><strong>Nouns often come after one or more adjectives:</strong></span></p><p></p><p> * a great <strong>relief</strong></p><p> * a peaceful <strong>afternoon</strong></p><p> * the tall, Indian <strong>doctor</strong></p><p> * this difficult <strong>word</strong></p><p> * my brown and white <strong>house</strong></p><p> * such crass <strong>stupidity</strong></p><p></p><p><strong><span style="font-size: 12px"><span style="color: seagreen">3. Function in a Sentence</span></span></strong></p><p></p><p>Nouns have certain functions (jobs) in a sentence, <span style="color: red">for example:</span></p><p></p><p> * subject of verb: <strong>Doctors </strong>work hard.</p><p> * object of verb: He likes <strong>coffee</strong>.</p><p> * subject and object of verb: <strong>Teachers </strong>teach <strong>students</strong>.</p><p></p><p>But the subject or object of a sentence is not always a noun. It could be a pronoun or a phrase. In the sentence "My doctor works hard", the noun is "doctor" but the subject is "My doctor".</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Fırat, post: 2265, member: 34"] The simple definition is: a person, place or thing. [COLOR="red"]Here are some examples: [/COLOR] * [B]person[/B]: man, woman, teacher, John, Mary * [B]place[/B]: home, office, town, countryside, America * [B]thing[/B]: table, car, banana, money, music, love, dog, monkey The problem with this definition is that it does not explain why "love" is a noun but can also be a verb. [COLOR="seagreen"][B]Another (more complicated) way of recognizing a noun is by its:[/B][/COLOR] 1. [B]Ending[/B] 2. [B]Position[/B] 3. [B]Function[/B] [COLOR="seagreen"][SIZE="3"][B]1. Noun Ending[/B][/SIZE][/COLOR] There are certain word endings that show that a word is a noun, [COLOR="red"]for example:[/COLOR] * -ity > [B]nationality[/B] * -ment > [B]appointment[/B] * -ness > [B]happiness[/B] * -ation > [B]relation[/B] * -hood > [B]childhood[/B] But this is not true for the word endings of all nouns. [COLOR="red"][B]For example[/B][/COLOR], the noun "spoonful" ends in -ful, but the adjective "careful" also ends in -ful. [COLOR="seagreen"][SIZE="3"][B]2. Position in Sentence[/B][/SIZE][/COLOR] We can often recognise a noun by its position in the sentence. [COLOR="seagreen"][B]Nouns often come after a determiner (a determiner is a word like a, an, the, this, my, such):[/B][/COLOR] * a [B]relief[/B] * an [B]afternoon[/B] * the [B]doctor[/B] * this [B]word[/B] * my [B]house[/B] * such [B]stupidity[/B] [COLOR="seagreen"][B]Nouns often come after one or more adjectives:[/B][/COLOR] * a great [B]relief[/B] * a peaceful [B]afternoon[/B] * the tall, Indian [B]doctor[/B] * this difficult [B]word[/B] * my brown and white [B]house[/B] * such crass [B]stupidity[/B] [B][SIZE="3"][COLOR="seagreen"]3. Function in a Sentence[/COLOR][/SIZE][/B] Nouns have certain functions (jobs) in a sentence, [COLOR="red"]for example:[/COLOR] * subject of verb: [B]Doctors [/B]work hard. * object of verb: He likes [B]coffee[/B]. * subject and object of verb: [B]Teachers [/B]teach [B]students[/B]. But the subject or object of a sentence is not always a noun. It could be a pronoun or a phrase. In the sentence "My doctor works hard", the noun is "doctor" but the subject is "My doctor". [/QUOTE]
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What are Nouns?
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