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All About Noun

It's not easy to describe a noun. In simple terms, nouns are "things" (and verbs are "actions"). Like food. Food (noun) is something you eat (verb). Or happiness. Happiness (noun) is something you want (verb). Another example is "human being"". A human being (noun) is something you are.
What are Nouns?

The simple definition is: a person, place or thing
teacher, school, book

Types
Countable Nouns,   Uncountable Nouns
dog/dogs,                rice, hair(s)


Proper Nouns (Names)
Do we say "Atlantic Ocean" or "the Atlantic Ocean"? Should I write "february" or "February"?
Shirley, Mr Jeckyll, Thailand, April, Sony


Possessive 's
Adding 's or ' to show possession.
John's car, my parents' house


Noun as Adjective
Sometimes we use a noun to describe another noun. In that case, the first noun is "acting as" an adjective.
love story, tooth-brush, bathroom


Nouns name people, places, and things. Every noun can further be classified as common or proper. A proper noun has two distinctive features: 1) it will name a specific [usually a one-of-a-kind] item, and 2) it will begin with a capital letter no matter where it occurs in a sentence.

Common Noun   Proper Noun
writer                  Herman Melville
teacher                Mrs. Hacket
beagle                 Snoopy
cookie                Oreo
city                     Orlando
restaurant           Tito's Taco Palace
document           Declaration of Independence
school                University of Southern California
Read the following sentences. Notice the difference between the common and proper nouns.

Tina offered Antonio one of her mother's homemade oatmeal cookies but only an Oreo would satisfy his sweet tooth.
Cookies = common noun; Oreo = proper noun.

Charlie had wanted an easy teacher for his composition class, but he got Mrs. Hacket, whose short temper and unreasonable demands made the semester a torture.
Teacher = common noun; Mrs. Hacket = proper noun.

Gloria wanted to try a new restaurant, so Richard took her to Tito's Taco Palace, where no one dips into the hot sauce until the drinks have arrived at the table.
Restaurant = common noun; Tito's Taco Palace = proper noun.

In English grammar, words that refer to people, places, or things are called nouns. They can be classified in many ways.
One way to classify nouns is according to whether they can be counted or not. Many English mistakes are related to this point. By reading through this page, you will understand:
what countable and uncountable nouns are 
how to use them correctly in a sentence
Countable (or count)nouns are words which can be counted. They have a singular form and a plural form. They usually refer to things. Most countable nouns become plural by adding an ‘s’ at the end of the word.
For example:
Singular          Plural
chair                chairs
bottle               bottles
student             students
Uncountable (or non-count)nouns are words which cannot be counted. Therefore, they only have a singular form. They have no plural forms. These words are thought of as wholes rather than as parts. They usually refer to abstractions (such as confidence or advice) or collectives (such as equipment or luggage).
For example:
Singular: money, furniture, information

Words can be combined to form compound nouns. These are very common, and new combinations are invented almost daily. They normally have two parts. The second part identifies the object or person in question ( man, friend, tank, table, room ). The first part tells us what kind of object or person it is, or what its purpose is ( police, boy, water, dining, bed ):
What type / what purpose      What or who
police                  +                  man
boy                      +                 friend
water                  +                  tank
dining                 +                 table
bed                     +                 room

The two parts may be written in a number of ways :
1. as one word. 
Example: policeman , boyfriend
2. as two words joined with a hyphen. 
Example: dining-table
3. as two separate words. 
Example: fish tank .


There are no clear rules about this - so write the common compounds that you know well as one word, and the others as two words.

The two parts may be: Examples:noun + noun: bedroom, water tank, motorcycle, printer cartridgenoun + verb: rainfall, haircut, train-spottingnoun + adverb: hanger-on, passer-byverb + noun: washing machine, driving licence, swimming poolverb + adverb: lookout, take-off, drawbackadjective + noun: greenhouse, software, redheadadjective + verb: dry-cleaning, public speakingadverb + noun: onlooker, bystanderadverb + verb: output, overthrow, upturn, input


Compound nouns often have a meaning that is different from the two separate words.
Stress is important in pronunciation, as it distinguishes between a compound noun (e.g. greenhouse ) and an adjective with a noun (e.g. green house ).
In compound nouns, the stress usually falls on the first syllable:
a ' greenhouse = place where we grow plants (compound noun) 
a green 'house = house painted green (adjective and noun) 
a ' bluebird = type of bird (compound noun) 
a blue 'bird = any bird with blue feathers (adjective and noun)

* Many common compound nouns are formed from phrasal verbs (verb + adverb or adverb + verb).
Examples: 
breakdown, outbreak, outcome, cutback, drive-in, drop-out, feedback, flyover, hold-up, hangover, outlay, outlet, inlet, makeup, output, set-back, stand-in, takeaway, walkover.

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