Characteristics of Nouns
Characteristics of Nouns
Characteristics of Nouns
Nouns are commonly thought of as "naming" words, and specifically as the names of "people, places, or things". Nouns such
as John,London, and computer certainly fit this description, but the class of nouns is much broader than this. Nouns also denote
abstract and intangible concepts such as birth, happiness, evolution, technology,management, imagination, revenge,
politics, hope, cookery, sport,literacy....
Because of this enormous diversity of reference, it is not very useful to study nouns solely in terms of their meaning. It is much
more fruitful to consider them from the point of view of their formal characteristics.
Characteristics of Nouns
Many nouns can be recognised by their endings. Typical noun endings include:
Most nouns have distinctive SINGULAR and PLURAL forms. The plural of regular nouns is formed by adding -s to the singular:
Singular Plural
car cars
dog dogs
house houses
However, there are many irregular nouns which do not form the plural in this way:
Singular Plural
man men
child children
sheep sheep
We can recognise many nouns because they often have the, a, oran in front of them:
the car
an artist
a surprise
the egg
a review
These words are called determiners, which is the next word class we will look at.
Nouns may take an -'s ("apostrophe s") or GENITIVE MARKER to indicate possession:
the boy's pen
a spider's web
my girlfriend's brother
John's house
If the noun already has an -s ending to mark the plural, then the genitive marker appears only as an apostrophe after the plural
form:
the boys' pens
the spiders' webs
the Browns' house
The genitive marker should not be confused with the 's form of contracted verbs, as in John's a good boy (= John is a good boy).
rally car
table top
cheese grater
University entrance examination
We will look at these in more detail later, when we discuss noun phrases.
Nouns which name specific people or places are known as PROPER NOUNS.
John
Mary
London
France
Many names consist of more than one word:
John Wesley
Queen Mary
South Africa
Atlantic Ocean
Buckingham Palace
Proper nouns may also refer to times or to dates in the calendar:
January, February, Monday, Tuesday, Christmas, Thanksgiving
All other nouns are COMMON NOUNS.
Since proper nouns usually refer to something or someone unique, they do not normally take plurals. However, they may do so,
especially when number is being specifically referred to:
Common nouns are either count or non-count. COUNT nouns can be "counted", as follows:
Count Non-count
a pen *a software
In general, non-count nouns are considered to refer to indivisible wholes. For this reason, they are sometimes
called MASS nouns.
Some common nouns may be either count or non-count, depending on the kind of reference they have. For
example, in I made a cake,cake is a count noun, and the a before it indicates singular number. However, in I like
cake, the reference is less specific. It refers to "cake in general", and so cake is non-count in this sentence.
Pronouns
Pronouns are a major subclass of nouns. We call them a subclass of nouns because they can sometimes replace a
noun in a sentence:
Noun Pronoun
In these examples the pronouns have the same reference as the nouns which they replace. In each case, they refer
to people, and so we call them PERSONAL PRONOUNS. However, we also include in this group the pronoun it,
although this pronoun does not usually refer to a person. There are three personal pronouns, and each has a
singular and a plural form:
1st I we
1st me us
But he cannot replace John in I gave John a new job. Here, we have to use the objective form him: I gave him a new
job.
As well as personal pronouns, there are many other types, which we summarise here.
Possessive mine, yours, his, hers, ours, theirs The white car ismine
Relative that, which, who, whose, whom, The book that you gave me was
where, when really boring
Case and number distinctions do not apply to all pronoun types. In fact, they apply only to personal pronouns,
possessive pronouns, and reflexive pronouns. It is only in these types, too, that gender differences are shown
(personal he/she, possessive his/hers, reflexive himself/herself). All other types are unvarying in their form.
Many of the pronouns listed above also belong to another word class - the class of determiners. They are pronouns
when they occur independently, that is, without a noun following them, as inThis is a new car. But when a noun
follows them - This car is new - they are determiners. We will look at determiners in the next section.
A major difference between pronouns and nouns generally is that pronouns do not take the or a/an before them.
Further, pronouns do not take adjectives before them, except in very restricted constructions involving some
indefinite pronouns (a little something,a certain someone).
While the class of nouns as a whole is an open class, the subclass of pronouns is closed.
Numerals
Numerals include all numbers, whether as words or as digits. They may be divided into two major types.
CARDINAL numerals include words like:
five twos are ten
he's in his eighties
They may also take the:
the fourth of July
a product of the 1960s
And some plural numerals can take an adjective before them, just like other nouns:
Numerals do not always occur independently. They often occur before a noun, as in
one day
three pages
the fourth day of July
In this position, we classify them as determiners, which we will examine in the next section.
The gender of nouns plays an important role in the grammar of some languages. In French, for instance, a
masculine noun can only take the masculine form of an adjective. If the noun is feminine, then it will take a
different form of the same adjective - its feminine form.
In English, however, nouns are not in themselves masculine or feminine. They do not have grammatical gender,
though they may refer to male or female people or animals:
These distinctions in spelling reflect differences in sex, but they have no grammatical implications. For instance,
we use the same form of an adjective whether we are referring to a waiter or to a waitress:
Here the choice of pronoun is determined by the sex of the person being referred to. However, this distinction is
lost in the plural:
Gender differences are also manifested in possessive pronouns (his/hers) and in reflexive pronouns
(himself/herself).
When the notion of sex does not apply -- when we refer to inanimate objects, for instance -- we use the pronoun it: