Category: 4. Nouns

  • Noun Clause

    What Is a Noun Clause? A noun clause refers to a clause that serves the same purpose as a noun and is usually dependent. Just like nouns do, a noun clause names people, things, places, and ideas. Noun clauses typically have a verb and a subject, but they cannot express a complete thought in a sentence; hence they are known as dependent clauses. Since noun…

  • Noun Phrase

    What Is a Noun Phrase? A noun phrase refers to words that work the same way as a noun. A noun phrase features a noun, pronoun, and other modifiers. In this case, a pronoun is used in place of a noun, and it could either be an indefinite pronoun or a subject pronoun. An indefinite pronoun refers to a…

  • Gender of Nouns

    Some nouns that indicate people, may have different forms to describe masculine or feminine usage. Masculine and Feminine Examples: Man − Woman  Son – Daughter Father − Mother  Husband – Wife Some male and female animals also have different forms to indicate masculine or feminine usage Masculine and Feminine Examples: A cock – A hen A bull – A cow  A drake – A duck Masculine and Feminine Words…

  • Nouns that are Count and Noncount

    Some nouns can be used as both countable or uncountable, usually with a difference in meaning. Iron iron = material (They tried to change iron into gold.) iron = electrical appliance (I scorched my dress with the iron.) Glass glass = material (Glass can be recycled from old bottles.) glass = container (Champagne was fizzing in the glass.) Time time =…

  • Articles with Uncountable Nouns

    Learn how and when to use Articles with Uncountable Nouns. 1. We do not say a/an with an uncountable noun. For example: water (NOT a water) weather (NOT a weather) music (NOT a music) 2. A number can not be put in front of an uncountable noun. For example: a piece of news (NOT 1 news) two bottle of water (NOT 2 water) a grain…

  • What is a Quantifier?

    Quantifier definition: A quantifier is a word or number that shows an amount or number. Examples: one, each, every, a little, much… Example sentences: I have a few friends. I have a little money. The quantifier a few is used before friends, which is a countable noun. A little is used before money, an uncountable noun. Quantifiers are adjectives and adjective phrases that go before nouns. They give information about how much or how many of an item you…

  • Countable and Uncountable Food

    Countable food is a type of food that can be counted because they can be used with numbers and have plural forms. For example, “apple” is a countable food because you can say you want “three apples”. Uncountable food is the opposite of countable food because it does not make sense to talk about it…

  • What is an Uncountable Noun?

    Countable nouns are common nouns that can take a plural, can combine with numerals or counting quantifiers, and can take an indefinite article such as a or an. Examples of count nouns are book, orange, cat, animal, man… The outside of an orange is bitter, but the inside is sweet. A cat was basking on the window sill. Uncountable Nouns are substances,…

  • What are Countable Nouns? | Countable and Uncountable Nouns

    Learn countable nouns vs uncountable nouns in English with useful grammar rules, list and example sentences. Countable and Uncountable nouns vary from language to language. In some languages, there are no countable nouns (e.g., Japanese). In addition, some nouns that are uncountable in English may be countable in other languages (e.g., hair or information). Countable nouns are individual objects,…

  • What Is A Possessive Noun?

    What is a possessive noun? A possessive noun is a noun that names who or what owns or has possession of something. In most cases, for singular nouns to show that possession, we add an apostrophe + s. For plural nouns we simply add an apostrophe except for those few plural nouns that do not end in s. Possessive Nouns Examples:…