Shopping on line can be easy, simple and save you lots of money. It can also take a lot of your time, frustrate you, and result in unwanted purchases. Now the same can be said for regular high street shopping, but with the vast opportunity presented by the Internet it will pay you to spend a few minutes reading this and understanding how to better optimize your Noun shopping experience:
1. Compare - without doubt the biggest advantage that the Noun offers shoppers today is the ability to compare thousands of Noun at a time. This is a great thing, but not necessarily all the time! Too much can be daunting at times so take advantage of the great comparison sites and where possible let them do the hard work for you.
2. Research - if it has been said it will be on the internet. Ignorance is no longer a justifiable reason for buying the wrong thing. Take the time to research in detail everything that you could possible want to know about
3. Testimonials - don't know anybody that has bought a Noun? Wrong! If the Noun is good the internet will let you know. Use the Internet as a friend and get testimonials before you buy.
4. Questions - Got a question about Noun then search the Forums, FAQ's, Blogs etc. Don't be afraid to ask .....
5. Reputation - Never heard of the company selling Noun? Don't worry, no reason why you should know every company in the world, but you know someone that does! Use the internet to find out what people are saying about Noun and build up a picture of their reputation for sales, returns, customer service, delivery etc.
6. Returns - still worried that even after all of the above your Noun wont be what you want? Check out the returns policy. There is so much competition now that someone, somewhere is bound to offer the terms that you are comfortable with.
7. Feedback - happy with your Noun then let people know, after all you are depending on others people input in your buying decision, so why not give a little back.
8. Security - check for the yellow padlock on the Noun site before you buy, and the s after http:/ /i.e. https:// = a secure site
9. Contact - got a question about Noun, or want to leave a comment then check out the sites contact page. Reputable companies have them and respond.
10. Payment - ready to pay for your Noun, then use your credit card or PayPal! Be aware of companies that don't accept them, there may be genuine reasons but given the huge amount of choice you have when buying online there is no reason at all not to buy via credit card or PayPal.
{{ExamplesSidebar|35%|
- The cat sat on the rat.
- Please hand in your assignments by the end of the week.
- Cleanliness is next to godliness.
- George Washington was the first president of the United States of America.
-->{{ExamplesSidebar|35%| A proper or common noun can co-occur with an
article (grammar) or an
adjective. Verbs and adjectives can't. As usual, a `*' in front of an example means that this example is ungrammatical.
the name ("name" is a noun: can co-occur with a definite article "the.")
*the baptize ("baptize" is a verb: can't co-occur with a definite article.)
Constant circulation ("circulation" is a noun: can co-occur with the attributive adjective "constant.")
*constant circulate ("circulate" is a verb: can't co-occur with the attributive adjective "constant".)
a fright ("fright" is a noun: can co-occur with the indefinite article "a.")
*an afraid ("afraid" is an adjective: can't co-occur with the article "a.")
terrible fright (The noun "fright" can co-occur with the adjective "terrible.")
*terrible afraid (The adjective "afraid" can't co-occur with the adjective "terrible"
-->In linguistics, a
noun or
noun substantive is a
lexical category which is defined in terms of how its members combine with other grammatical kinds of expressions. Since different languages have different inventories of grammatical categories, the definition of
noun will differ from language to language. In
English language, nouns may be defined as those
Morphology (linguistics) stem (linguistics) that form words which can co-occur with
definiteness articles and adjective, and function as the phrase of a noun phrase.
The discovery of nouns
The word comes from the
Latin nomen meaning "name". Word classes like nouns were first described by the Sanskrit grammarian Panini (grammarian) and ancient Greeks like Dionysios Thrax; and were defined in terms of their
morphology (linguistics) properties. For example, in Ancient Greek, nouns may be inflected for
case (grammar), such as dative or accusative. Verbs, on the other hand, may be inflected for
grammatical tense, such as past, present or future, whilst nouns may not. Aristotle also had a notion of
onomata (nouns) and
rhemata (verbs) which, however, does not exactly correspond with modern notions of nouns and verbs. Nouns are words that describe person, place, thing, animal or abstract idea. Lexical categories and argument structure : a study with reference to Sakha. Ph.D. diss. University of Utrecht.
Different definitions of nouns
Expressions of natural language will have properties at different levels. They have
formal properties, like what kinds of morphology (linguistics) prefixes or
suffixes they may take and what kinds of other expressions they may combine with; but they also have
semantics properties, i.e. properties pertaining to their meaning. The definition of a noun at the outset of this page is thus a
formal, traditional grammatical definition. That definition, for the most part, is considered uncontroversial and furnishes the propensity for certain language users to effectively distinguish most nouns from non-nouns. However, it has the disadvantage that it does not apply to nouns in all languages. For example in Russian language, there are no definite articles, so one may not define nouns by means of those. There are also several attempts of defining nouns in terms of their
semantics properties. Many of these are controversial, but some are discussed below.
Names for things
In Traditional grammar, one often encounters the definition of nouns that they are all and only those expressions that refer to a
person,
place,
thing,
event,
substance,
quality, or
idea, etc. This is a
semantic definition. It has been criticized by contemporary linguists and advocates of
Functional Grammar as being uninformative. Contemporary linguists generally agree that one may not successfully define nouns (or other grammatical categories) in terms of what sort of
object in the world they
reference to or
signification. Part of the
conundrum is that the definition makes use of relatively
general nouns ("thing," "phenomenon," "event") to define what nouns
are. The existence of such
general nouns demonstrates that nouns are organized in taxonomy hierarchies or more appropriately, structured relationships of Paradigmatic analysis and syntagmatic analysis. But other kinds of expressions are also organized into such structured taxonomic relationships. For example the verbal array: "stroll," "saunter," "stride," and "tread" are more specific words than the more
general "walk". Hence, the
syntagm or in this example the "verbal array" reside within the
paradigm of "walk". Moreover, "walk" is more specific than the verb "move," which, in turn, is less general than "change." But it is unlikely that such taxonomic relationships may be used to
define nouns and verbs. We may not
define verbs as those words that refer to "changes" or "states", for example, because the nouns
change and
state probably refer to such things, but, of course, aren't verbs. Similarly, nouns like "invasion," "meeting, or "collapse" refer to things that are "done" or "happen." In fact, an influential theory has it that verbs like "kill" or "die" refer to events,Davidson, Donald. 1967. The logical form of action sentences. In NicholasRescher, ed., The Logic of Decision and Action, Pittsburgh, Pa: Universityof Pittsburgh Press.Parsons, Terence. 1990. Events in the semantics of English: a study in subatomic semantics. Cambridge, Mass.:MIT Press which is among the sort of thing that nouns are supposed to refer to. The point being made here is not that this view of verbs is wrong, but rather that this property of verbs is a poor basis for a
definition of this category, just like the property of
having wheels is a poor basis for a definition of cars (some things that have wheels, such as my suitcase or a jumbo jet, aren't cars). Similarly, adjectives like "yellow" or "difficult" might be thought to refer to qualities, and adverbs like "outside" or "upstairs" seem to refer to places, which are also among the sorts of thing nouns can refer to. But verbs, adjectives and adverbs are not nouns, and nouns aren't verbs, adjectives or adverbs. One might argue that "definitions" of this sort really rely on speakers' prior intuitive knowledge of what nouns, verbs and adjectives are, and, so don't really add anything over and beyond this. Speakers' intuitive knowledge of such things might plausibly be based on
formal criteria, such as the traditional grammatical definition of English nouns aforementioned.
Prototypically referential expressions
Another semantic definition of nouns is that they are
prototypically referential.Croft, William. 1993. "A noun is a noun is a noun - or is it? Some reflections on the universality of semantics." Proceedings of the Nineteenth Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society, ed. Joshua S. Guenter, Barbara A. Kaiser and Cheryl C. Zoll, 369-80. Berkeley: Berkeley Linguistics Society. That definition is also not very helpful in distinguishing actual nouns from verbs. But it may still correctly identify a core property of nounhood. For example, we will tend to use nouns like "fool" and "car" when we wish to refer to fools and cars, respectively. The notion that this is
prototypical reflects the fact that such nouns can be used, even though nothing with the corresponding property is referred to:
John is no
fool.
If I had a
car, I'd go to Marrakech.
The first sentence above doesn't refer to any fools, nor does the second one refer to any particular car.
Predicates with identity criteria
The British logician Peter Thomas Geach proposed a very subtle semantic definition of nouns.Geach, Peter. 1962. Reference and Generality. Cornell University Press. He noticed that adjectives like "same" can modify nouns, but no other kinds of parts of speech, like verbs or
adjectives. Not only that, but there also doesn't seem to be any
other expressions with similar meaning that can modify verbs and adjectives. Consider the following examples.
: Good: John and Bill participated in the
same fight.
: Bad: *John and Bill
samely fought.
There is no English adverb "samely." In some other languages, like Czech, however there are adverbs corresponding to "samely." Hence, in Czech, the translation of the last sentence would be fine; however, it would mean that John and Bill fought
in the same way: not that they participated in the
same fight. Geach proposed that we could explain this, if nouns denote logical
predicate (grammar)s with
identity criteria. An identity criterion would allow us to conclude, for example, that "person x at time 1 is
the same person as person y at time 2." Different nouns can have different identity criteria. A well known example of this is due to Gupta:Gupta, Anil. 1980, The logic of common nouns. New Haven and London: Yale University Press.
National Airlines transported 2 million
passengers in 1979.
National Airlines transported (at least) 2 million
persons in 1979.
Given that, in general, all passengers are persons, the last sentence above ought to follow logically from the first one. But it doesn't. It is easy to imagine, for example, that on average, every person who travelled with National Airlines in 1979, travelled with them twice. In that case, one would say that the airline transported 2 million
passengers but only 1 million
persons. Thus, the way that we count
passengers isn't necessarily the same as the way that we count
persons. Put somewhat differently: At two different times, you may correspond to two distinct
passengers, even though you are one and the same person. For a precise definition of
identity criteria, see Gupta.Gupta, Anil. 1980, The logic of common nouns. New Haven and London: Yale University Press.
Recently, the linguist Mark BakerBaker, Mark. 2005.
Lexical Categories - Verbs, nouns and adjectives. Cambridge University Press. has proposed that Geach's definition of nouns in terms of identity criteria allows us to
explain the characteristic properties of nouns. He argues that nouns can co-occur with (in-)definite articles and numerals, and are "prototypically referential"
because they are all and only those parts of speech that provide identity criteria. Baker's proposals are quite new, and linguists are still evaluating them.
Classification of nouns in English
===Proper nouns and common nouns===Proper nouns (also called proper names) are nouns representing unique entities (such as
London or
John), as distinguished from common nouns which describe a class of entities (such as
city or
person).
In English language and most other languages that use the
Latin alphabet, proper nouns are usually
capitalisation. Languages differ in whether most elements of multiword proper nouns are capitalised (e.g., American English
House of Representatives) or only the initial element (e.g., Slovenian
Državni zbor 'National Assembly'). In German language, nouns of all types are capitalised. The convention of capitalising
all nouns was previously used in English, but ended circa 1800. In America, the shift in capitalisation is recorded in several noteworthy documents. The end (but not the beginning) of the United States Declaration of Independence#Annotated text of the Declaration (1776) and all of the United States Constitution (1787) show nearly all nouns capitalised, the United States Bill of Rights#Text of the Bill of Rights (1789) capitalises a few common nouns but not most of them, and the
Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution (1865) only capitalises proper nouns.
Sometimes the same word can function as both a common noun and a proper noun, where one such entity is special. For example: "There can be many
deity, but there is only one
God." This is somewhat magnified in Hebrew language where
EL means
god (as in
a god),
God (as in
the God), and El (god) (the name of a particular Canaan god). Another example is the word "Internet." In the vast majority of usage, it is a proper noun, and thus capitalized. However, it can be used as a common noun when talking about "internet technologies" (TCP/IP, DNS, HTTP) that are not necessarily in use on "the Internet," which is a specific global information network. Incorrect capitalization of the proper noun is frequent, even in respected newspapers and magazines.The common meaning of the word or words constituting a proper noun may be unrelated to the object to which the proper noun refers. For example, someone might be named "Tiger Smith" despite being neither a tiger nor a smith. For this reason, proper nouns are usually not
translation between languages, although they may be transliteration. For example, the German surname
Knödel becomes
Knodel or
Knoedel in English (not the literal
Dumpling). However, the
Transliteration of place names and the names of
monarchs,
popes, and non-contemporary
authors is common and sometimes universal. For instance, the Portuguese language word
Lisboa becomes
Lisbon in
English language; the English
London becomes
Londres in French; and the ancient Greek
Aristotelēs becomes Aristotle in English.
Count nouns and mass nouns
Count nouns (or
countable nouns) are common nouns that can take a plural, can combine with
numerals or
quantifiers (e.g. "one", "two", "several", "every", "most"), and can take an indefinite article ("a" or "an"). Examples of count nouns are "chair", "nose", and "occasion".
Mass nouns (or
non-countable nouns) differ from count nouns in precisely that respect: they can't take plural or combine with number words or quantifiers. Examples from English include "laughter", "cutlery", "helium", and "furniture". For example, it is not possible to refer to "a furniture" or "three furnitures". This is true, even though the furniture referred to could, in principle, be counted. Thus the distinction between mass and count nouns shouldn't be made in terms of what sorts of things the nouns
refer to, but rather in terms of how the nouns
present these entities.Krifka, Manfred. 1989."Nominal Reference, Temporal Constitution and Quantification in Event Semantics". In R. Bartsch, J. van Benthem, P. von Emde Boas (eds.), Semantics and Contextual Expression, Dordrecht: Foris Publication.Borer, Hagit. 2005.
In Name Only. Structuring Sense, Volume I. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Some words function in the singular as a count noun and, without a change in the spelling, as a mass noun in the plural: she caught a
fish, we caught
fish; he shot a
deer, they shot some
deer; the
craft was dilapidated, the pier was chockablock with
craft.
Collective nouns
Collective nouns are nouns that refer to
groups consisting of more than one individual or entity, even when they are inflected for the
Grammatical number. Examples include "committee," "herd" and "school" (of herring). These nouns have slightly different grammatical properties than other nouns. For example, the
noun phrases that they
head (syntax) can serve as the subject (grammar) of a
collective predicate, even when they are inflected for the singular. A collective predicate is a predicate that normally can't take a singular subject. An example of the latter is "talked to each other."
:Good: The
boys talked to each other.
:Bad: *The
boy talked to each other.
:Good: The
committee talked to each other.
Concrete nouns and abstract nouns
Concrete nouns refer to definite objects which you use at least one of your senses to observe. For instance, "chair", "apple", or "Janet".
Abstract nouns on the other hand refer to ideas or concepts, such as "justice" or "hate". While this distinction is sometimes useful, the boundary between the two of them is not always clear. In English, many abstract nouns are formed by adding noun-forming suffixes ("-ness", "-ity", "-tion") to adjectives or verbs. Examples are "happiness", "circulation" and "serenity".
Nouns and pronouns
Noun phrases can typically be replaced by pronouns, such as "he", "it", "which", and "those", in order to avoid repetition or explicit identification, or for other reasons. For example, in the sentence "Janet thought that he was weird", the word "he" is a pronoun standing in place of the name of the person in question. The English word
one can replace parts of noun phrases, and it sometimes stands in for a noun. An example is given below:
John's car is newer than
the one that Bill has.
But
one can also stand in for bigger subparts of a noun phrase. For example, in the following example,
one can stand in for
new car.
This new car is cheaper than
that one.
Substantive as a word for "noun"
Starting with old
Latin language grammars, many European languages use some form of the word
substantive as the basic term. Nouns in the dictionaries of such languages are demarked by the abbreviation "s" instead of "n", which may be used for proper nouns instead. This corresponds to those grammars in which nouns and adjectives phase into each other in more areas than, for example, the English term Predicative_adjective#Predicative_adjective entails. In French and Spanish, for example, adjectives become nouns referring to people who have the characteristics of the adjective. An example in English is:
The
poor you have always with you.
Similarly, an adjective can also be used for a whole group or organization of people:
The Socialist
International.
Hence, these words are substantives that are usually adjectives in English.
References
Bibliography
- Laycock, Henry, 2005 'Mass nouns, Count nouns and Non-count nouns', Draft version of entry in Encyclopedia of Language and Linguistics Oxford: Elsevier (pdf)
See also
{{ExamplesSidebar|35%|
- The cat sat on the rat.
- Please hand in your assignments by the end of the week.
- Cleanliness is next to godliness.
- George Washington was the first president of the United States of America.
-->{{ExamplesSidebar|35%| A proper or common noun can co-occur with an
article (grammar) or an
adjective. Verbs and adjectives can't. As usual, a `*' in front of an example means that this example is ungrammatical.
the name ("name" is a noun: can co-occur with a definite article "the.")
*the baptize ("baptize" is a verb: can't co-occur with a definite article.)
Constant circulation ("circulation" is a noun: can co-occur with the attributive adjective "constant.")
*constant circulate ("circulate" is a verb: can't co-occur with the attributive adjective "constant".)
a fright ("fright" is a noun: can co-occur with the indefinite article "a.")
*an afraid ("afraid" is an adjective: can't co-occur with the article "a.")
terrible fright (The noun "fright" can co-occur with the adjective "terrible.")
*terrible afraid (The adjective "afraid" can't co-occur with the adjective "terrible"
-->In linguistics, a
noun or
noun substantive is a lexical category which is defined in terms of how its members combine with other grammatical kinds of expressions. Since different languages have different inventories of grammatical categories, the definition of
noun will differ from language to language. In English language, nouns may be defined as those Morphology (linguistics)
stem (linguistics) that form words which can co-occur with
definiteness articles and adjective, and function as the phrase of a
noun phrase.
The discovery of nouns
The word comes from the Latin
nomen meaning "
name". Word classes like nouns were first described by the Sanskrit grammarian Panini (grammarian) and ancient Greeks like
Dionysios Thrax; and were defined in terms of their morphology (linguistics) properties. For example, in Ancient Greek, nouns may be inflected for
case (grammar), such as dative or accusative. Verbs, on the other hand, may be inflected for
grammatical tense, such as past, present or future, whilst nouns may not. Aristotle also had a notion of
onomata (nouns) and
rhemata (verbs) which, however, does not exactly correspond with modern notions of nouns and verbs. Nouns are words that describe person, place, thing, animal or abstract idea. Lexical categories and argument structure : a study with reference to Sakha. Ph.D. diss. University of Utrecht.
Different definitions of nouns
Expressions of natural language will have properties at different levels. They have
formal properties, like what kinds of morphology (linguistics)
prefixes or
suffixes they may take and what kinds of other expressions they may combine with; but they also have semantics properties, i.e. properties pertaining to their meaning. The definition of a noun at the outset of this page is thus a
formal, traditional grammatical definition. That definition, for the most part, is considered uncontroversial and furnishes the propensity for certain language users to effectively distinguish most nouns from non-nouns. However, it has the disadvantage that it does not apply to nouns in all languages. For example in
Russian language, there are no definite articles, so one may not define nouns by means of those. There are also several attempts of defining nouns in terms of their
semantics properties. Many of these are controversial, but some are discussed below.
Names for things
In
Traditional grammar, one often encounters the definition of nouns that they are all and only those expressions that refer to a
person,
place,
thing,
event,
substance,
quality, or
idea, etc. This is a
semantic definition. It has been criticized by contemporary linguists and advocates of Functional Grammar as being uninformative. Contemporary linguists generally agree that one may not successfully define nouns (or other grammatical categories) in terms of what sort of
object in the world they
reference to or
signification. Part of the
conundrum is that the definition makes use of relatively
general nouns ("thing," "phenomenon," "event") to define what nouns
are. The existence of such
general nouns demonstrates that nouns are organized in taxonomy hierarchies or more appropriately, structured relationships of Paradigmatic analysis and syntagmatic analysis. But other kinds of expressions are also organized into such structured taxonomic relationships. For example the verbal array: "stroll," "saunter," "stride," and "tread" are more specific words than the more
general "walk". Hence, the
syntagm or in this example the "verbal array" reside within the
paradigm of "walk". Moreover, "walk" is more specific than the verb "move," which, in turn, is less general than "change." But it is unlikely that such taxonomic relationships may be used to
define nouns and verbs. We may not
define verbs as those words that refer to "changes" or "states", for example, because the nouns
change and
state probably refer to such things, but, of course, aren't verbs. Similarly, nouns like "invasion," "meeting, or "collapse" refer to things that are "done" or "happen." In fact, an influential theory has it that verbs like "kill" or "die" refer to events,Davidson, Donald. 1967. The logical form of action sentences. In NicholasRescher, ed., The Logic of Decision and Action, Pittsburgh, Pa: Universityof Pittsburgh Press.Parsons, Terence. 1990. Events in the semantics of English: a study in subatomic semantics. Cambridge, Mass.:MIT Press which is among the sort of thing that nouns are supposed to refer to. The point being made here is not that this view of verbs is wrong, but rather that this property of verbs is a poor basis for a
definition of this category, just like the property of
having wheels is a poor basis for a definition of cars (some things that have wheels, such as my suitcase or a jumbo jet, aren't cars). Similarly, adjectives like "yellow" or "difficult" might be thought to refer to qualities, and adverbs like "outside" or "upstairs" seem to refer to places, which are also among the sorts of thing nouns can refer to. But verbs, adjectives and adverbs are not nouns, and nouns aren't verbs, adjectives or adverbs. One might argue that "definitions" of this sort really rely on speakers' prior intuitive knowledge of what nouns, verbs and adjectives are, and, so don't really add anything over and beyond this. Speakers' intuitive knowledge of such things might plausibly be based on
formal criteria, such as the traditional grammatical definition of English nouns aforementioned.
Prototypically referential expressions
Another semantic definition of nouns is that they are
prototypically referential.Croft, William. 1993. "A noun is a noun is a noun - or is it? Some reflections on the universality of semantics." Proceedings of the Nineteenth Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society, ed. Joshua S. Guenter, Barbara A. Kaiser and Cheryl C. Zoll, 369-80. Berkeley: Berkeley Linguistics Society. That definition is also not very helpful in distinguishing actual nouns from verbs. But it may still correctly identify a core property of nounhood. For example, we will tend to use nouns like "fool" and "car" when we wish to refer to fools and cars, respectively. The notion that this is
prototypical reflects the fact that such nouns can be used, even though nothing with the corresponding property is referred to:
John is no
fool.
If I had a
car, I'd go to Marrakech.
The first sentence above doesn't refer to any fools, nor does the second one refer to any particular car.
Predicates with identity criteria
The British logician
Peter Thomas Geach proposed a very subtle semantic definition of nouns.Geach, Peter. 1962. Reference and Generality. Cornell University Press. He noticed that adjectives like "same" can modify nouns, but no other kinds of parts of speech, like
verbs or adjectives. Not only that, but there also doesn't seem to be any
other expressions with similar meaning that can modify verbs and adjectives. Consider the following examples.
: Good: John and Bill participated in the
same fight.
: Bad: *John and Bill
samely fought.
There is no English adverb "samely." In some other languages, like Czech, however there are adverbs corresponding to "samely." Hence, in Czech, the translation of the last sentence would be fine; however, it would mean that John and Bill fought
in the same way: not that they participated in the
same fight. Geach proposed that we could explain this, if nouns denote logical
predicate (grammar)s with
identity criteria. An identity criterion would allow us to conclude, for example, that "person x at time 1 is
the same person as person y at time 2." Different nouns can have different identity criteria. A well known example of this is due to Gupta:Gupta, Anil. 1980, The logic of common nouns. New Haven and London: Yale University Press.
National Airlines transported 2 million
passengers in 1979.
National Airlines transported (at least) 2 million
persons in 1979.
Given that, in general, all passengers are persons, the last sentence above ought to follow logically from the first one. But it doesn't. It is easy to imagine, for example, that on average, every person who travelled with National Airlines in 1979, travelled with them twice. In that case, one would say that the airline transported 2 million
passengers but only 1 million
persons. Thus, the way that we count
passengers isn't necessarily the same as the way that we count
persons. Put somewhat differently: At two different times, you may correspond to two distinct
passengers, even though you are one and the same person. For a precise definition of
identity criteria, see Gupta.Gupta, Anil. 1980, The logic of common nouns. New Haven and London: Yale University Press.
Recently, the linguist
Mark BakerBaker, Mark. 2005.
Lexical Categories - Verbs, nouns and adjectives. Cambridge University Press. has proposed that Geach's definition of nouns in terms of identity criteria allows us to
explain the characteristic properties of nouns. He argues that nouns can co-occur with (in-)definite articles and numerals, and are "prototypically referential"
because they are all and only those
parts of speech that provide identity criteria. Baker's proposals are quite new, and linguists are still evaluating them.
Classification of nouns in English
===Proper nouns and common nouns===Proper nouns (also called proper names) are nouns representing unique entities (such as
London or
John), as distinguished from common nouns which describe a class of entities (such as
city or
person).
In English language and most other languages that use the Latin alphabet, proper nouns are usually
capitalisation. Languages differ in whether most elements of multiword proper nouns are capitalised (e.g., American English
House of Representatives) or only the initial element (e.g., Slovenian
Državni zbor 'National Assembly'). In
German language, nouns of all types are capitalised. The convention of capitalising
all nouns was previously used in English, but ended circa 1800. In America, the shift in capitalisation is recorded in several noteworthy documents. The end (but not the beginning) of the
United States Declaration of Independence#Annotated text of the Declaration (1776) and all of the United States Constitution (1787) show nearly all nouns capitalised, the United States Bill of Rights#Text of the Bill of Rights (1789) capitalises a few common nouns but not most of them, and the
Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution (1865) only capitalises proper nouns.
Sometimes the same word can function as both a common noun and a proper noun, where one such entity is special. For example: "There can be many
deity, but there is only one
God." This is somewhat magnified in
Hebrew language where
EL means
god (as in
a god),
God (as in
the God), and El (god) (the name of a particular Canaan god). Another example is the word "Internet." In the vast majority of usage, it is a proper noun, and thus capitalized. However, it can be used as a common noun when talking about "internet technologies" (TCP/IP, DNS, HTTP) that are not necessarily in use on "the Internet," which is a specific global information network. Incorrect capitalization of the proper noun is frequent, even in respected newspapers and magazines.The common meaning of the word or words constituting a proper noun may be unrelated to the object to which the proper noun refers. For example, someone might be named "Tiger Smith" despite being neither a tiger nor a smith. For this reason, proper nouns are usually not
translation between languages, although they may be transliteration. For example, the German surname
Knödel becomes
Knodel or
Knoedel in English (not the literal
Dumpling). However, the Transliteration of place names and the names of monarchs,
popes, and non-contemporary authors is common and sometimes universal. For instance, the Portuguese language word
Lisboa becomes
Lisbon in English language; the English
London becomes
Londres in French; and the ancient Greek
Aristotelēs becomes Aristotle in English.
Count nouns and mass nouns
Count nouns (or
countable nouns) are common nouns that can take a
plural, can combine with
numerals or
quantifiers (e.g. "one", "two", "several", "every", "most"), and can take an indefinite article ("a" or "an"). Examples of count nouns are "chair", "nose", and "occasion".
Mass nouns (or
non-countable nouns) differ from count nouns in precisely that respect: they can't take plural or combine with number words or quantifiers. Examples from English include "laughter", "cutlery", "helium", and "furniture". For example, it is not possible to refer to "a furniture" or "three furnitures". This is true, even though the furniture referred to could, in principle, be counted. Thus the distinction between mass and count nouns shouldn't be made in terms of what sorts of things the nouns
refer to, but rather in terms of how the nouns
present these entities.Krifka, Manfred. 1989."Nominal Reference, Temporal Constitution and Quantification in Event Semantics". In R. Bartsch, J. van Benthem, P. von Emde Boas (eds.), Semantics and Contextual Expression, Dordrecht: Foris Publication.Borer, Hagit. 2005.
In Name Only. Structuring Sense, Volume I. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Some words function in the singular as a count noun and, without a change in the spelling, as a mass noun in the plural: she caught a
fish, we caught
fish; he shot a
deer, they shot some
deer; the
craft was dilapidated, the pier was chockablock with
craft.
Collective nouns
Collective nouns are nouns that refer to
groups consisting of more than one individual or entity, even when they are inflected for the Grammatical number. Examples include "committee," "herd" and "school" (of herring). These nouns have slightly different grammatical properties than other nouns. For example, the
noun phrases that they head (syntax) can serve as the
subject (grammar) of a
collective predicate, even when they are inflected for the singular. A collective predicate is a predicate that normally can't take a singular subject. An example of the latter is "talked to each other."
:Good: The
boys talked to each other.
:Bad: *The
boy talked to each other.
:Good: The
committee talked to each other.
Concrete nouns and abstract nouns
Concrete nouns refer to definite objects which you use at least one of your
senses to observe. For instance, "chair", "apple", or "Janet".
Abstract nouns on the other hand refer to ideas or concepts, such as "justice" or "hate". While this distinction is sometimes useful, the boundary between the two of them is not always clear. In English, many abstract nouns are formed by adding noun-forming suffixes ("-ness", "-ity", "-tion") to adjectives or verbs. Examples are "happiness", "circulation" and "serenity".
Nouns and pronouns
Noun phrases can typically be replaced by
pronouns, such as "he", "it", "which", and "those", in order to avoid repetition or explicit identification, or for other reasons. For example, in the sentence "Janet thought that he was weird", the word "he" is a pronoun standing in place of the name of the person in question. The English word
one can replace parts of noun phrases, and it sometimes stands in for a noun. An example is given below:
John's car is newer than
the one that Bill has.
But
one can also stand in for bigger subparts of a noun phrase. For example, in the following example,
one can stand in for
new car.
This new car is cheaper than
that one.
Substantive as a word for "noun"
Starting with old Latin language grammars, many European languages use some form of the word
substantive as the basic term. Nouns in the dictionaries of such languages are demarked by the abbreviation "s" instead of "n", which may be used for proper nouns instead. This corresponds to those grammars in which nouns and adjectives phase into each other in more areas than, for example, the English term Predicative_adjective#Predicative_adjective entails. In French and Spanish, for example, adjectives become nouns referring to people who have the characteristics of the adjective. An example in English is:
The
poor you have always with you.
Similarly, an adjective can also be used for a whole group or organization of people:
The Socialist
International.
Hence, these words are substantives that are usually adjectives in English.
References
Bibliography
- Laycock, Henry, 2005 'Mass nouns, Count nouns and Non-count nouns', Draft version of entry in Encyclopedia of Language and Linguistics Oxford: Elsevier (pdf)
See also
- Verbs
- adjectives
- part of speech
- noun phrase
- mass noun
- collective noun
- proper name
- reference
Noun - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In linguistics, a noun is a member of a large, open lexical category whose members can occur as the main word in the subject of a clause, the object of a verb, or the object of a ...
Noun
The noun is the name of a thing. These names may be sorted into four groups; PROPER NOUNS . COMMON NOUNS. ABSTRACT NOUNS . COLLECTIVE NOUNS
AskOxford: noun
noun • noun Grammar a word (other than a pronoun) used to identify any of a class of people, places, or things (common noun), or to name a particular one of these (proper noun).
Nouns - Glossary Definition - UsingEnglish.com
A noun is a word used to refer to people, animals, objects, substances, states, events and feelings. Nouns can be a subject or an object of a verb, can be modified by an adjective and ...
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Grammatical part of speech that names a person, animal, object, quality, idea, or time. Nouns can refer to objects such as house, tree (concrete nouns); specific persons and places ...
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