NOUNS
Some nouns have same words for plural and singular.
KINDS OF NOUNS:
- Common Nouns – are names of people (e.g. man), things (e.g. books), animals (e.g. monkey) and places (church).
- Proper Nouns – are special names of people (e.g. George Bush), things (e.g. Financial Times), animals (e.g. King Kong) and places (e.g. Paris). A proper noun begins with a Capital Letter.
- Abstract Nouns – An abstract noun is the name of something that we can only think of or feel but cannot see (e.g. friendship).
- Collective Nouns – are names used for a number of people,
things or animals together and treated as one. For example: a group of friends, a bunch of bananas, a litter of puppies.
- Countable and Uncountable Nouns – Countable nouns are nouns which can be counted (e.g. trees). Uncountable nouns are nouns which cannot be counted. (e.g. smoke).
Countable and Uncountable Nouns are used with the following:
Countable Noun | Uncountable Noun |
a, an, a few, several, many, | a little, much, some, plenty of, |
some, plenty of, a lot of, | a lot of, a large amount of, |
a large number of | a great deal of |
Nouns have four genders:
1. Masculine Gender – The masculine gender is used for all males. Example: boy, man
2. Feminine Gender – The feminine gender is used for all females. Example: girl, woman
3. Common Gender – The common gender is used where the noun can be both male and female. Example: cousin, friend, person, child, student
4. Neuter Gender – The neuter gender is used for things which have no life or sex. Example: table, chair.
Singular and Plural Nouns – A noun that shows only one person (e.g. a girl), thing (e.g. pencil), animal (e.g. tiger) or place (e.g. market) is called a singular noun).
A noun that shows more than one person (e.g. girls), thing (e.g. pencils), animal (e.g. tigers) or place (e.g. markets) is called a plural noun.
How plural nouns are formed.
By adding ‘es’ to nouns ending in –ch, –s, –sh and –x.
beach | beaches | peach | peaches |
branch | branches | speech | speeches |
ditch | ditches | watch | watches |
boss | bosses | glass | glasses |
bus | buses | lens | lenses |
chorus | choruses | pass | passes |
brush | brushes | fish | fishes |
bush | bushes | lash | lashes |
dish | dishes | wish | wishes |
box | boxes | hoax | hoaxes |
fax | faxes | six | sixes |
fox | foxes | tax | taxes |
By adding ‘es’ to nouns ending in –o.
buffalo | buffaloes | potato | potatoes |
cargo | cargoes | mosquito | mosquitoes |
echo | echoes | tomato | tomatoes |
By adding ‘s’ to nouns ending in –o.
banjo | banjos | patio | patios |
bamboo | bamboos | photo | photos |
radio | radios | video | videos |
By replacing ‘y’ with –ies.
baby | babies | lorry | lorries |
fly | flies | navy | navies |
hobby | hobbies | puppy | puppies |
By adding ‘s’ to nouns ending in –y.
boy | boys | key | keys |
day | days | toy | toys |
donkey | donkeys | turkey | turkeys |
By replaying ‘f’ or ‘fe’ with –ves.
calf | calves | loaf | loaves |
half | halves | self | selves |
life | lives | wife | wives |
By adding ‘s’ to nouns ending in –f or –fe.
chief | chiefs | hoof | hoofs |
dwarf | dwarfs | reef | reef |
gulf | gulfs | roof | roofs |
By changing vowels.
foot | feet | louse | lice |
goose | geese | tooth | teeth |
mouse | mice | woman | women |
aircraft | aircraft | music | music |
crossroads | crossroads | series | series |
furniture | furniture | sheep | sheep |
Exceptional plural.
child | children | ox | oxen |
crisis | crises | passer-by | passers-by |
mouse | mice | radius | radii |
FORMING NOUNS
Nouns can be formed from nouns, verbs and adjectives. They are formed by adding certain letters to them.
Nouns | Nouns |
widow | widowhood |
friend | friendship |
king | kingdom |
Verbs | Nouns |
add | addition |
fail | failure |
give | gift |
Adjectives | Nouns |
clean | cleanliness |
sad | sadness |
beautiful | beauty |
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