Home
About
Contact
Advertise with us

Noun Rules - English Grammar

noun grammar rules

What is Noun ?

A Noun is used as the name of person, thing, place, idea and quality of a person, a thing and a place. For example:

Rama was an epic king.
My scissors is not sharp.



Kind of Noun

1. Common Noun: It is the name given in common to every person or a thing of the same kind. It is not a name of any particular person or thing or place. For example: boy, girl, teacher etc.

I write with a pen.
The student asked me a few questions.



2. Proper Noun: A proper noun is the name of a particular person or place. For example: Delhi, Sania, India, Jupiter etc.

Ramu is a wise fellow.
Patna lacks basic civic amenities.



Rule I: Proper nouns are always written with a capital letter at the beginning. For example:

Incorrect: Earlier the capital of india was in calcutta.
Correct: Earlier the capital of India was in Calcutta.



Rule II: Proper nouns are sometimes used as common nouns. For example:

Incorrect: LK Advani is today regarded as Sardar Patel of India.
Correct: LK Advani is today regarded as the Sardar Patel of India.



Rule III: In this case proper nouns are always preceded by articles. For example:

She is a Lata Mangeshkar.
Kalidas is the Shakespeare of India.



3. Collective Noun: A Collective noun is the name of a group of persons or things. For example: army, committee, crowd, fleet, flock, herd, jury, mob, parliament, team etc.


Rule IV: A collective noun usually takes a singular verb and is substituted by a singular pronoun. For example:

Incorrect: The jury were unanimous in their opinion.
Correct: The jury was unanimous in its opinion.




Rule V: A collective noun takes a plural verb and is substituted by a plural pronoun when the individuals of which it is composed are thought of net behaving as a single unit. For example:

Incorrect: The jury was divided in its opinions.
Correct: The jury were divided in their opinions.



4. Abstract Noun: An abstract noun is usually the name of a quality, action or state considered apart from the object ( which is usually a common noun and often qualified by an adjective) to which it belongs. For example: beauty, youth, honesty, death etc.

Innocence is integral to a child.
Love knows no bound.



5. Material Noun: A material noun is the name of a material ( matter from which a thing is made). For example: gold, coal, wheat, tea etc.

Cotton is the source of natural fibre.
Milk constitutes a nutritious food.




Rule VI: A material noun does not take an article (a, an, the) before it. For example:

Incorrect: The tobacco is a cash crop.
Correct: Tobacco is a cash crop.




Rule VII: It takes articles when treated as common nouns. For example:

Incorrect: They offered me glass of water.
Correct: They offered me a glass of water.



Numbers of a Noun

Numbers are of two kinds-
(1) Singular Number
(2) Plural Number



Rule VIII: Generally while changing singular noun to plural we add s, es in the end. For example:

cow-cows
chair-chairs
school-schools
Mango-Mangoes



Rule IX: On the surface some nouns appear to be singular but in meaning they are treated as plural. For example: cattle, clergy, people, children, police, poultry etc.

Incorrect: The peasantry has always stood as rockstars for the development of a country.
Correct: The peasantry have always stood as rockstars for the development of a country.



Rule X: Some nouns look like plural but are always used as singular. For example:
Subjects - Mathematics, economics, physics, ethics, politics, classics etc.



Rule XI: When these subjects denote qualities or property, they are used in plural sense. For example:

Incorrect: His mathematics is weak.
Correct: His mathematics are weak.

Diseases - Rickets, AIDS, diabetes, mumps, measles etc.
Some other nouns - News, gallows, summons, innings etc.



Rule XII: Some nouns are plural in form and in meaning, normally they are instruments or dress articles which have two parts and make a kind of pair. Do not use a/an before these nouns. For example: Spectacles, tongs, scissors, pincers, bellows, trousers, drawers, breaches, pants, knickers, pantaloons etc.
Certain other nouns - caves, riches (valuables), alms, funds, proceeds (profit), annals (record).

Incorrect: I bought a trousers yesterday.
Correct:I bought a pair of trousers yesterday.



Rule XIII: Some nouns are always singular and used as singular only. For example: Poetry, information, machinery, dust, furniture, dirt, traffic, money, music, etc. Some nouns have one meaning in singular form and another in plural.

Incorrect: What is a poetry?
Correct: What is poetry?

Incorrect: The sceneries of Kashmir is beautiful.
Correct: The scenery of Kashmir is beautiful.



1 comment:

Adverb Quiz

  • Adverb Quiz 2
    Dear readers, We are proving a Adverb Quiz for your practice those help to increase your accuracy and confidence level in competitive examinations SSC, LIC, UPSC, IBPS PO, IBPS CLERK, RRB PO, RRB CLERK, CDS, NDA, Railway, Air Force, Bank and Other Examinations. Some of the sentences are...
  • Adverb Quiz 1
    Dear readers, We are proving a Adverb Quiz for your practice those help to increase your accuracy and confidence level in competitive examinations SSC, LIC, UPSC, IBPS PO, IBPS CLERK, RRB PO, RRB CLERK, CDS, NDA, Railway, Air Force, Bank and Other Examinations. Some of the sentences are...

Contact Form

Name

Email *

Message *