nounhood
Nounhood is the property by which a linguistic item is recognized as belonging to the noun category in a given language. In many languages, nouns head noun phrases and serve as arguments of verbs or as complements of determiners and numerals. Nounhood influences the syntactic environments in which a word can appear and its typical referential interpretation (e.g., individuals, kinds, or abstract entities).
Diagnosing nounhood relies on distributional and semantic tests. A standard set includes the ability to take
Types and related notions commonly discussed under nounhood include common nouns versus proper nouns, count nouns
Cross-linguistic variation is a central consideration: nounhood is not universally encoded as a single, uniform category.