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Noun

A noun is a word that names a person, place, thing, or idea. Nouns function as the main reference in noun phrases and serve as the syntactic backbone of sentences, where they can act as subjects, objects, or complements.

Nouns are commonly categorized in several ways. Common nouns name general items (city, river); proper nouns name

Noun phrases are built around a noun head and can include determiners (the, this, my), adjectives (red,

In English, nouns show limited morphology compared with some other languages: plurality is usually marked, and

Choosing the appropriate noun type and form affects meaning and grammaticality. Proper nouns require capitalization; common

specific
items
and
are
capitalized
(London,
Nile).
They
can
be
countable
or
uncountable
(mass)
nouns
describing
quantities
that
can
be
counted
(apple,
idea)
or
substances
that
are
not
easily
counted
on
their
own
(water,
sand).
Abstract
nouns
refer
to
ideas
or
states
(freedom,
happiness).
Concrete
nouns
refer
to
things
perceived
by
the
senses
(flower,
thunder).
Collective
nouns
refer
to
a
group
(team,
committee).
large),
and
complements.
Nouns
can
take
plural
forms
(cats,
ideas)
and
possessive
forms
(cat's
toy,
children's
books).
possessive
form
is
typically
marked
by
's
or
s'
for
plural
nouns
ending
in
s.
Many
languages
assign
gender
or
case
to
nouns,
affecting
agreement
with
verbs
or
adjectives.
nouns
do
not.
Nouns
are
central
to
naming
and
categorizing
elements
of
reality
and
thought.