Noun
Noun is a word
which names a person, a place or a thing.
For example chair, table, book, New
York, computer, cup, boy, John, hospital, Newton, garden, room, man,
Paris, doctor, and pen are nouns because each of these words is a name
of a person, a place or a thing.
Examples.
Chair, table, book, cup, computer, picture, (names
of things)
New York, Paris, Canada, Toronto, school, hospital,
cinema, garden, (names of places)
John, Newton, R.H Stephen, Einstein, man, boy,
doctor (names of persons)
Types of Noun
There are two main types of noun.
• Common Noun
• Proper Noun
Common Noun
Name of a common or a non-specific
thing, place, or person is called common noun.
Common noun refers to a non-specific or
non-particular thing, place or person.
For example book, pen, room, garden man,
girl, road, camera, month, day, chair, school, boy, car, are common
nouns because each of these nouns refers to a common thing, place or person.
Proper Noun.
Name of a particular or a specific thing,
place or person is called proper Noun.
For example BMW Car, April, Monday, Oxford
University, New York, America, John, Newton, Einstein, R.H Stephen, are
proper nouns because each of these nouns refers to a particular thing, place or
person.
If a common noun is specified it becomes a proper
noun. For example day is a common noun but if it is specified
like Monday or Friday, it becomes proper noun.
Similarly car is a common noun but if it is specified
like BMW Car, it becomes proper noun.
Use of CAPITAL
LETTER for proper noun.
The first letter of proper noun is always written
in capital letter.
Examples.
He
lives in Paris.
She
studies in Oxford University.
Author
of this book is John Stephen.
Laws
of motion were presented by Newton
The
richest person of the world is Bill Gates.
Use of “THE” for
proper noun.
1. The article “the” is used before some proper nouns.
Here are some rules for the use of article “the” before proper nouns.
2. Article “the” is not used before the name of
countries, cities, for example New York, Mexico, Canada, Toronto, London,
Paris, America. But if the name of country or city or place
expresses group of places or lands or states, then article “the” will be used
before it. For example, the Philippines, the Netherlands, the United
States
3. Article “the” is not used before the name of
universities, for example Oxford University, Yale University, or
Columbia University. But if the name of university is
written in a order that it includes the word “of” then article “the” will be
used before it, for example, the University of British Colombia, the
university of Oxford, the University of Toronto.
4. Article “the” is used before names composed of both
common noun and proper noun, for example the New York city, the
Dominion of Canada, the River Nile
5. “The” is used before the names of laws, principles,
theories or devices, for example, the Pythagorean Theorem, the Fahrenheit
Scale, the Law of Newton, the Allais effect. But if the proper noun is
used in possessive form, no article will be used, for example Newton’s
Laws of Motion, Hooke’s Law of Elasticity, Dalton’s Law of Partial Pressures.
6. “The” used by the name of ocean, sea, river,
dessert or forest (except lakes and fall) for example the Pacific
Ocean, the Mediterranean Sea, the Sahara, the Black Forests.
7. “The” is used before the names of buildings,
hotels, libraries having particular names, for example the Brunel
Hotel, the Lahore Museum, the Library of Congress,
8. “The” is used before the name of a geographical
region and points on globe, for example the Middle East, the West, the
Equator, the North Pole
9. “The” is usually used before the names of
organizations for example, the Association of Chartered
Accountants, the World Health Organization,
Countable and Uncountable
Nouns
Countable Nouns.
A noun which can be counted is called countable
noun.
Pen is countable noun because we can count it and
can say one pen, two pens, three pens or more pens. Pen, chair, cup,
room, man, baby, bottle, dog, cat are examples countable nouns.
Singular and Plural noun (Countable Noun)
A countable noun can be singular as well as
plural. Article “a” or “an” is used before
singular noun but not before plural noun.
If a singular noun starts with consonant letter
then “a” is used before it, i.e. a book, a cat, a pen. If a
singular noun starts with a vowel letter or with consonant which sounds like
vowel in that word, “an” is used before it i.e. an apple, an umbrella,
an onion, an hour.
Plural noun (Countable Noun)
Plural noun means more than one person, place or
thing. Word “chair” is a singular noun but word “chairs” is
plural noun.
1. Plurals are usually formed by adding –s or –es to
singular noun for examplebook–books, cat–cats, box–boxes, tax–taxes. If
a word ends with “y”, the “y” is changed to “I” then –es is
added to make it plural, for example, baby–babies, lady–ladies.
There may be some exceptions.
2. Some plural are formed in different ways for
example, man–men, child–children, leaf–leaves, wife–wives, foot–feet,
toot–teeth, datum–data, basis–bases. Such plurals are called
irregular plural forms.
3. Some nouns have same plural and singular form, for
example, sheep–sheep, deer–deer, swine–swine.
Uncountable Nouns.
Uncountable noun refers to substances which cannot
be counted.
For example, water is an uncountable noun because
we cannot count it. We cannot say, one water or two water. Such
substances which cannot be counted in terms of numbers are called uncountable
noun.
Examples: Water, milk, bread, honey, rain, furniture, news,
information, pleasure, honesty, courage, weather, music, preparation, warmth,
wheat are examples of uncountable nouns.
Use of Uncountable
Nouns.
Uncountable nouns are usually treated as singular
noun for auxiliary verbs in sentence but articles “a or an” are usually not
used before uncountable nouns.
Examples.
Water
maintains its level.
Necessity
is the mother of invention
His preparation
was not good.
The Weather
is very pleasant today.
This information
is very helpful in solving the problem.
The warmth of
sun causes evaporation of water.
Uncountable nouns may be used as countable noun
when it refers to an individual thing. For example life is uncountable noun but
it be used as countable noun if refers to individual, lives.
Example.
It was feared that two lives had
been lost.
We can also use word like “some, any, no, little,
more etc” before uncountable nouns if needed in sentence.
Examples.
They have no information about the accused.
There
is little milk in the glass.
Changing
Uncountable nouns into countable nouns.
We can change uncountable noun into countable noun
if we specify a unit or measuring standard for it. For example “water” is an
uncountable noun but we can make it countable by saying one glass of water or
two glass of water etc. In this example we selected a unit that is glass. We
can also say one litre of water or one cup of water etc. By selecting such
units or measuring standards we can change uncountable noun in to countable
which can be counted in terms of numbers.
Examples.
Uncountable –
countable
Bread – a
piece of bread.
Wheat – a
grain of wheat.
Milk – a
glass of milk
Information
– a piece of information
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