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What is a Noun?

What is a Noun?

 noun (noun): a word (except a   pronoun) that identifies a person,   place or thing, or names one of them   (proper noun)
  The simple definition is: a person,       place or thing. Here are some   examples:
  •   person: man, woman, teacher, John,    Mary
  •   place: home, office, town,         countryside, America
  • thing: table, car, banana, money, music, love, dog, monkey
Note that any of the above can also be referred to by a pronoun. And note that names like John or America are called "proper nouns".
The problem with the simple definition above is that it does not explain why "love" is a noun but can also be a verb.
Another (more complicated) way of recognizing a noun is by its:
  1. ending
  2. position
  3. function

1. Noun ending

There are certain word endings that show that a word is a noun, for example:
  • -ity → nationality
  • -ment → appointment
  • -ness → happiness
  • -ation → relation
  • -hood → childhood
But this is not true for the word endings of all nouns. For example, the noun "spoonful" ends in -ful, but the adjective "careful" also ends in -ful.

2. Position in sentence

We can often recognise a noun by its position in the sentence.
Nouns often come after a determiner (a determiner is a word like a, an, the, this, my, such):
  • relief
  • an afternoon
  • the doctor
  • this word
  • my house
  • such stupidity
Nouns often come after one or more adjectives:
  • a great relief
  • a peaceful afternoon
  • the tall, Indian doctor
  • this difficult word
  • my brown and white house
  • such crass stupidity

3. Function in a sentence

Nouns have certain functions (jobs) in a sentence, for example:
  • subject of verb: Doctors work hard.
  • object of verb: He likes coffee.
  • subject and object of verb: Teachers teach students.
But the subject or object of a sentence is not always a noun. It could be a pronoun or a phrase. In the sentence "My doctor works hard", the noun is "doctor" but the subject is "My doctor".

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