Published On:Friday, 9 December 2011
Posted by Muhammad Atif Saeed
Noun: Person, Place, Thing, Idea, or Activity
What Is a Noun?
A noun is a part of speech that names a person, place, thing, idea, or activity. Some nouns are specific for people, places, or events; and some represent groups or collections. Some nouns aren't even technically labeled nouns as their part of speech; they're verbs acting like nouns in sentences.Nouns can be singular, referring to one thing, or plural, referring to more than one thing. Nouns can be possessive, indicating ownership or a close relationship. Regardless of the type, nouns should always agree with their verbs in sentences. Use singular verbs with singular nouns and plural verbs with plural nouns. You have to know how a noun works in order to write an effective sentence.
Proper Nouns
If a noun names a specific person or place, or a particular event or group, it is called a proper noun and is always capitalized. Some examples are Eleanor Roosevelt, Niagara Falls, Dracula, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Great Depression.Unfortunately, some writers assign proper-noun status indiscriminately to words, sprinkling capital letters freely throughout their writing. For example, the Manhattan Project is correctly capitalized because it is a historic project, the name given to the specific wartime effort to design and build the first nuclear weapons. But the common noun project should not be capitalized when referring to a club's project to clean up the campus, for example. Similarly, the Great Depression should be capitalized because it refers to the specific period of economic failure that began with the stock market collapse in 1929. When the word depression refers to other economic hard times, however, it is not a proper noun; it is a common noun and should not be capitalized.
Some flexibility in capitalizing nouns is acceptable. A writer may have a valid reason for capitalizing a particular term. For example, some companies have style guides that dictate capital letters for job titles such as manager. But often the capitalization beyond the basic guidelines is an effort to give a word an air of importance, and you should avoid it.
Verbs Used as Nouns
Sometimes in English, a verb is used as a noun. When the verb form is altered and it serves the same function as a noun in the sentence, it is called a gerund.Gerunds
A noun created from the -ing form of a verb can act as a subject or an object in a sentence.- Sleeping sometimes serves as an escape from studying.
Problem gerunds
Gerunds can sometimes be difficult to use correctly in a sentence. What problems can you have with gerunds?When a noun or pronoun precedes a gerund, use the possessive case of the noun or pronoun.
- Jana's sleeping was sometimes an escape from studying.
- Jana's slumber was sometimes an escape from studying.
not Jana slumber was sometimes an escape from studying.
Jana was annoyed by Bill's studying.
not Jana was annoyed by Bill studying.
Collective Nouns
A word that stands for a group of things is called a collective noun. In fact, the word group itself is a collective noun. Here are a few others: family, club, team, committee, staff, furniture, jury, Congress, audience, herd.Usually these nouns are treated as singular because the emphasis is on the action of the entire unit rather than its individual parts.
- The team is going on the bus.
The committee wants to find a solution to the problem.
- The team have argued about going on the bus.
The committee want different solutions to the problem.
The team members have argued about going on the bus.
The committee members want different solutions to the problem.
Singular and Plural Nouns
The term number refers to whether a noun is singular or plural. Most nouns can be either singular or plural, depending on whether you are talking about one thing or more than one. You know the basic rule of adding -s to make the plural of a noun ( one cat, three cats), and you also know that many nouns don't follow that rule—for example, sheep (singular), sheep (plural); enemy, enemies; wharf, wharves; hero, heroes; goose, geese, and so on. Check a dictionary if you're not sure how to spell a plural noun. Do not add an apostrophe + s to a singular form to make it plural, even if the noun is a family name: the Taylors, not the Taylor's; donkeys, not donkey's; taxis, not taxi's.The singular and plural forms of some nouns with Latin and Greek endings can cause trouble. The noun data, for example, is plural; datum is the singular form. Although today the plural data is widely used as a singular noun, you should keep the distinction, particularly in scientific writing.
- The final datum (singular) is not consistent with the preceding data (plural), which are positive.
Possessive Case of Nouns
The possessive case of a noun is used to show ownership ( Jordan's car, my sister's house) or other close relationship ( the president's friends, the university's position).Problems with possessives
Sometimes possessives can cause problems. Do I add an ’s or just an apostrophe? Follow this rule: For singular nouns, add ’s, even if the noun ends in an -s or -z sound: dog's, house's, Wes's, Jesus's, Denver's, Keats's.For most plural possessive nouns, add an apostrophe alone: several months' bills, many Romanians' apartments, the encyclopedias' differences. If a plural noun doesn't end in -s, add -'s, just as you would with a singular noun: women's issues, mice's tails.
Switching to an of construction
When a possessive noun sounds awkward, reword to use an of construction. This is a better way to indicate the relationship, especially when referring to an inanimate object: the top of the page instead of the page's top; the lawn of the building on the corner instead of the building on the corner's lawn; the main characters of Pride and Prejudice instead of Pride and Prejudice's main characters; the novels of Dickens instead of Dickens's novels.Joint ownership
One last word about possessive nouns: When you are indicating joint ownership, use the possessive form in the final name only, such as Abbott and Costello's movies; Tom and Dawn's dinner party; Smith, Wilson, and Nelson's partnership.Agreement of Nouns and Verbs
Agreement is an important concept in grammar and a source of many writing errors. Nouns must agree with their verbs, which means that a singular noun requires a singular verb, and a plural noun requires a plural verb.- The rabbit jumps up and down. (singular)
The rabbits jump up and down. (plural)
Nouns with Latin or Greek endings and nouns that look plural but sometimes take singular verbs can cause agreement problems.
In the following example, criteria is plural. Use the plural form of the verb ( are).
- The criteria for judging an entry are listed in the brochure.
- Human rights is an issue that affects everyone.
- Human rights are ignored in many countries.
- Fifty miles is not such a long distance.
- Statistics is a subject I want to avoid.
Statistics are being gathered to show that women are better drivers than men.
- The number of people coming is surprising.
A number of people are coming.
A number like five thousand is what he had in mind.
With majority and minority, the key is to decide whether you want to emphasize individual people or things or the single unit.
The majority is opposed to the measure. (singular = single unit)
A minority of the younger people refuse to concede the point. (plural = individuals)