Nouns Flashcards
What is a noun?
A noun is a person/place/thing.
Ex: Woman, school, rain, bed. If a word can be preceded by a/an/the chances are its a noun
What is a gendered noun?
A gendered noun is a gender-specific and changes depending on the object’s sex.
Ex: Actor - Actress
What is a gerund?
A gerund is a verb that acts as a noun. Gerunds always end in -ing.
Ex: Skiing is my favorite form of exercise; eating enough leafy greens is hard to do; sleeping solves most of my problems. (skiing, eating, and sleeping are gerunds).
What is an appositive?
An appositive modifies or clarifies the noun or noun phrase that precedes it.
Ex: Ivan the Terrible ruled for a number of years. (The Terrible is an appositive that tells us something about Ivan.)
what is an appositive phrase?
An appositive phrase is a phrase set off by commas that tells the reader more about the noun or pronoun it modifies.
Ex: San Francisco, a city often shrouded in fog, is chilly at this time of year. (A city often shrouded in fog is the appositive phrase.)
What is a proper noun?
A proper noun is a specifically named person, place, or thing.
EX: President Clinton, Snafu University, England, Boston Red Sox.
What is a common noun?
A common noun is a naming noun that is not capitalized.
EX: interstate, college, books, cars
T/F: Nouns can appear anywhere in a sentence.
True. There are no rules about where a noun can or cannot appear in a sentence. However, a sentence must have at least one noun acting as the subject in order for the sentence to be complete.
What is the difference between a proper noun and a common noun?
A proper noun names a specific person, place, or thing, whereas a common noun does not specify by name instead referring to a general person, place, or thing.
What type of nouns are -airplane- and -Delta-?
Airplane is a common noun. Delta is a proper noun.
Are Skippy and peanut the same type of noun?
No. Skippy is a proper noun, and peanut is a common noun.
T/F: Kleenex and Xerox are the same type of noun.
True. Kleenex and Xerox are both proper nouns.
T/F: All proper nouns are capitalized.
True
T/F: A countable noun names a non-specific noun
False. A common noun names a non-specific noun. A countable noun is any noun that can be numbered.
T/F: Air- is a countable noun
False. Air- cannot be counted, so it is not a countable noun
T/F: Rims- is a countable noun.
True. We can count rims.
Is -rain- a countable noun?
No
T/F: -Wine- is a non- countable (mass) noun.
True. Wine- cannot be counted.