I name a specific person, place, thing, or idea. It's a big responsibility, a responsibility that requires a certain attention to detail. Watch.
Welcome to the Noun Office.
Trailer
Section 1 · Meet the Nouns
Sections 2–7
Meet the Nouns! (overview)
A noun names a person, a place, a thing, or an idea. Those four jobs cover every noun in town.
A noun names a person.
Examples
doctor, Beyoncé, brother, teacher
Now you try
A person can be specific or general. You could try a chef, or your grandma, or your best friend, or a librarian. Anyone counts.
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A noun names a place.
Examples
wilderness, Antarctica, neighborhood, Houston
Now you try
A location, a city, a country, or a room. You could try the kitchen, or Cleveland, or Mars, or your closet. Any place counts.
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A noun names a thing.
Examples
clipboard, sandwich, lamp, kazoo
Now you try
Anything you can pick up, point to, or photograph. You could try stapler, or banana, or clarinet, or paperclip. Things count.
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A noun names an idea.
Examples
courage, boredom, justice, freedom
Now you try
A feeling, a quality, or a concept you cannot touch. You could try hope, or curiosity, or honesty, or sadness. Ideas count.
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Common Nouns and Proper Nouns
A common noun names any person, place, or thing and is written in lowercase. A proper noun names a specific person, place, or thing and must be capitalized.
- Common Noun : Names any general person, place, thing, or idea; written in lowercase.
- Proper Noun : Names a specific person, place, thing, or idea; capitalized.
In a sentence
Swap all three nouns from common to proper and the meaning gets sharper.
Now you try
A common noun names a general person, place, thing, or idea. You could try marker, or stapler, or snack, or paperclip. Common nouns stay lowercase.
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Concrete Nouns and Abstract Nouns
A concrete noun names something you can see, hear, smell, taste, or touch. An abstract noun names an idea, feeling, or quality that you cannot see or touch.
- Concrete Noun : Names something that can be seen, heard, smelled, tasted, or touched.
- Abstract Noun : Names an idea, feeling, or quality that cannot be physically touched.
In a sentence
First one names things you can point to. Second one names things you can only think about. Both are nouns.
Now you try
A concrete noun names something you can see, hear, smell, taste, or touch. You could try bananas, or marshmallows, or pinecones, or socks. Anything you can sense with your body counts.
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Collective Nouns
A collective noun is a word that names a group of people or things. It can describe groups like team, class, family, herd, flock, or pack.
- Collective Noun : Names a group of people or things as a single unit.
In a sentence
Four collective nouns in one sentence. Each one names a whole group acting as one.
Now you try
A collective noun names a group acting as one. You could try flock, or team, or swarm, or parade. The group is the noun, not the members.
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Compound Nouns
One word
Some compound nouns are written as a single word.
Two words
Some are written as two separate words.
Hyphenated
Some are joined with hyphens.
Now you try
A compound noun puts two words together to make one. You could try toothbrush, or basketball, or skateboard, or fire truck. Sometimes they are one word, sometimes two, sometimes hyphenated.
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Singular Nouns and Plural Nouns
A singular noun names one person, place, or thing. A plural noun names more than one. Most nouns add -s, but nouns ending in s, ss, ch, sh, x, z add -es. Nouns ending in consonant + y change to -ies. Some nouns are irregular (man/men, child/children).
- Singular Noun : Names one person, place, thing, or idea.
- Plural Noun : Names more than one person, place, thing, or idea.
In a sentence
Most nouns add -s. A few change shape instead.
Now you try
A singular noun names just one of something. You could try goose, or cactus, or child, or sandwich. One only.
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Possessive Nouns
A possessive noun shows that it owns something. You make one by adding an apostrophe and an s to the owner noun, so dog becomes dog's. A possessive noun does the same job as a possessive adjective like his or its.
- Possessive Noun : A noun that shows ownership by adding an apostrophe and an s, like the dog's bone.
In a sentence
Three words can show ownership: a possessive noun, a possessive adjective (Jake's job), and a possessive pronoun (Roger's job). Below, watch the possessive noun do it with an apostrophe.
Now you try
A possessive noun adds an apostrophe and an s. You could try cat, or teacher, or city. The owner gets the 's.
Files it under done
That's the whole department. Six kinds of nouns, all filed. Head down the hall to The Big Noun Quiz. Eight questions. I'll be watching.
Or skip ahead to the quiz without checking in.