Noun Phrase
Noun Phrase
Noun Phrase
A noun phrase is a group of two or more words headed by a noun that includes
modifiers (e.g., 'the,' 'a,' 'of them,' 'with her').
A noun phrase plays the role of a noun. In a noun phrase, the modifiers can come
before or after the noun.
A phrase has at least two words and functions as one part of speech.
It follows therefore that a noun phrase functions as a noun in a sentence. We can
test this because we know that a noun can be replaced by a pronoun (e.g., he,
she, it, them). Looking at the examples above, we can replace each noun phrase
with a pronoun.
It relaxes me.
I know them.
She was him.
Here are some real-life examples of noun phrases as subjects, objects, and
complements:
This man has a nice smile, but he's got iron teeth. (Soviet Foreign Minister
Andrei Gromyko on Mikhail Gorbachev)
("This man" is the subject of the verb "has." The phrase "a nice smile" is the
direct object of "has." The noun phrase "iron teeth" is the direct object of
the verb "got." Here's the "pronoun test": He has one, but he's got them.)
I never learned from a man who agreed with me. (Science-fiction writer
Robert Heinlein)
(The noun phrase "a man who agreed with me" is the object of the
preposition "from." Here's the "pronoun test": I never learned from him.)
Every man of courage is a man of his word. (French dramatist Pierre
Corneille)
("Every man of courage" is the subject of the verb "is." The noun phrase "a
man of his word" is a subject complement following the linking verb "is."
Here's the "pronoun test": He is one.)
It can get complicated. It's not unusual for nouns and noun phrases to be
embedded within noun phrases. Looking at the last example, "courage" and
"word" are both nouns, but they are not the head nouns of the phrases. They are
both objects of the preposition "of," sitting in prepositional phrases that modify
the head nouns.