Sunday, January 14, 2018

Nouns

  Nouns  denote both concrete objects and abstract entities:

           Concrete                                              Abstract
           ـــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــ   
             book                                                   anger      
  
             chair                                                  difficulty  

             dog                                                    eagerness  

             grass                                                   history      

             lake                                                    information

            house                                                   progress    

            tree                                                       terror        

Many nouns can be identified by their characteristic endings:
        
       -ence        absence, difference, evidence, experience
  
       -ment       embarrassment, experiment, government, treatment

       -tion         education, information, situation, vegetation

       -ism          defeatism, optimism, populism, symbolism

    
    Singular and plural nouns

Most nouns have two forms, a singular form and a plural form. Regular nouns form the plural by adding -s to the singular:

             Singular                                     Plural
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             boy                                                  boys


             table                                                tables

However, some very frequent nouns have irregular plurals:

             Singular                                    Plural
          ـــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــــ
            man                                              men    

            woman                                        women 

            child                                            children

            foot                                              feet      

            goose                                           geese   

            mouse                                          mice    

            tooth                                            teeth    


            sheep                                           sheep   


The distinction between singular and plural is called number contrast.

  Common and proper nouns

Proper nouns are the names of individual people and places, including geographical features such as roads, rivers, mountains and oceans:

                Patrick                             Hong Kong   

                 Nelson Mandela              Euston Road  

                 China                               Atlantic Ocean

                 Paris                                River Thames  

                 New Delhi                      Mount Everest 

The names of institutions, newspapers, buildings and ships are also proper nouns:

        The Wall Street Journal           London Underground

       The Royal Albert Hall              Titanic                       

       Harvard University                   Mayflower                

       Millennium Dome

Finally, proper nouns include the days of the week, the months of the year and other periods of the calendar:


       Monday                                        Christmas               

       Tuesday                                        Passover                 

       January                                         Ramadan                

       February                                       Thanksgiving         

Proper nouns are written with an initial capital (upper-case) letter. All other nouns are common nouns. Since proper nouns usually refer to unique individuals, places, or events in the calendar, they do not normally have a plural form. However, they may take a plural ending when numberis specifically being referred to:

      There are two Patricks in my class.

   Countable and uncountable nouns

Singular nouns denote just one instance, while plural nouns denote more than one instance:

      Singular                        Plural
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      one boy                          two boys, three boys, four boys . . .  

     one day                            two days, three days, four days . . .   

     one computer                  two computers, three computers, four

                                              computers . . .                                    

These nouns are called countable nouns. In contrast, some nouns cannot be counted in this way:

       * one advice, two advices, three advices . . .

       * one furniture, two furnitures, three furnitures . . .

       * one software, two softwares, three softwares . . .

These nouns are called uncountable nouns. Uncountable nouns refer to things which are considered as indivisible wholes, and therefore cannot be counted.

Uncountable nouns have two important grammatical features:

1 They have a singular form (advice, furniture, software), but no
    plural form (*advices, *furnitures, *softwares)
2 They do not take a or an before them (*an advice, *a furniture,
   *a software)

Other uncountable nouns include: fun, information, health, honesty, luck,luggage, mud, music, traffic.

    Genitive nouns

Genitive nouns denote possession:
    
           John’s car = the car belonging to John

           the baby’s toys = the toys belonging to the baby

The genitive (sometimes called genitive case) is formed:

1 By adding ’s (apostrophe s) to a singular noun:

           the baby the baby’s toys

           our son our son’s wife

           the President the President’s office

2 If the noun already has an -s ending because it is plural, we add
the apostrophe alone to form the genitive:

           the Farmers the Farmers’ Union

           two doctors two doctors’ reports

3 With irregular plural nouns , the genitive is formed by
adding apostrophe s, just as in (1) above:

          the children the children’s clothes

          the men the men’s toiletries

         the women the women’s group

         the people the people’s decision

4 Nouns ending in -s, in which the -s does not denote a plural,
generally take an apostrophe alone:

         Prince Charles Prince Charles’ children

         Martin Nichols Martin Nichols’ house

 However, apostrophe s is also sometimes added:

        Prince Charles’s children.

     Dependent and independent genitives

Genitives are either dependent or independent. A dependent genitive is followed by a noun:

            the child’s toys

           a student’s essay

           Caroline’s friend

An independent genitive is not followed by a noun:

          a friend of Caroline’s

          a colleague of Frank’s

          an old army pal of Jim’s

An independent genitive is often used in referring to relationships between people, as in these examples. Notice that this construction has a very specific meaning. The independent genitive a friend of Caroline’s does not mean the same as the dependent genitive Caroline’s friend:

      Independent:    We met a friend of Caroline’s in Spain.

     Dependent:        We met Caroline’s friend in Spain.

The independent genitive means ‘one of Caroline’s friends’, who may or may not be known to the hearer. In contrast, the dependent genitive means ‘one specific friend’, who is assumed to be known to the hearer.

Independent genitives are also used in references to places and businesses:

         She stayed at Rebecca’s = Rebecca’s house

         I ran into Jim in Sainsbury’s = Sainsbury’s supermarket

        I left my wallet in the barber’s = the barber’s shop

    
      The gender of nouns

The gender of nouns plays an important role in the grammar of somelanguages. In French, for instance, a masculine noun such as ciel (skyrequires the masculine form (le) of the definite article (le ciel = the sky). A feminine noun, such as mer (sea) requires the feminine form (la) of the definite article (la mer = the sea).

In English, however, nouns are not in themselves either masculine or feminine.They do not have grammatical gender, though they may refer to male or female people or animals:

      The waiter was very efficient.    The waitress was very efficient.

      The tiger roars at night.              The tigress roars at night.

These spelling differences (waiter/waitress, tiger/tigress) reflect distinctionsof sex, but they have no grammatical implications. We use the same definite article the whether we are referring to the waiter or the waitress, the tiger or the tigress.

Similarly, the natural distinctions reflected in such pairs as brother/sister, father/mother, and king/queen have no implications for grammar. While they refer to specific sexes, these words are not masculine or feminine in themselves.

However, gender is important in English when we replace a noun with a pronoun
  
        The waiter was very efficient.        ~He was very efficient.

        The waitress was very efficient.     ~She was very efficient.

Here, the choice of pronoun (he or she) is determined by the sex of the person being referred to. Gender differences are also seen in other pronoun pairs, including his/her and himself/herself.