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Nothing but Nouns. Nouns. A noun is a person, place, thing or idea. A noun is often “ clued ” by the words “ an ” “ a ” and “ the ” An ape on the bike hit a bird with a rock at the end of the long road . We will learn about: concrete nouns and abstract nouns
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Nouns A noun is a person, place, thing or idea. A noun is often “clued” by the words “an”“a” and “the” Anape on thebike hit abird with arock at theend of the long road. We will learn about: concrete nouns and abstract nouns common nouns and proper nouns singular nouns and plural nouns collective nouns possessive nouns
Concrete vs. Abstract Nouns • A concrete noun is a noun that can be experienced with your five senses. You can touch, smell, see, hear or taste a concrete noun. • An abstract noun can not be experienced with your five senses. An abstract noun exists, but you cannot see it, taste it, smell it, touch it or hear it.
Concrete Nouns • A concrete noun can be experienced with one or more of your five senses. • An orange is a concrete noun. You can see an orange, taste one, smell one, touch one. • A whistle is a concrete noun. You can hear it and see hit and touch it.
Find the concrete nouns in the following sentences. I found the dog in the park next to school. Katie showed Billy the picture of his new computer.
Abstract Nouns Abstract nouns aren’t detected by your five senses. Honesty is an example of an abstract noun. What color is honesty? You don't know because you cannot see it. What texture is honesty? Who knows? You cannot touch it. What flavor is honesty? No clue! You cannot taste it! Does it make a sound? Of course not! Does it smell? Not a bit! Honesty is an abstract noun! Other abstract nouns: anger, peace, hate, pride, sympathy, bravery, success, courage, beauty, fun, loyalty pain, knowledge, trust, education, friendship, intelligence
Find the abstract nouns in the following sentences. The teacher had trust in her students. There was a lot of excitement the week before Winter Break. The trumpet player had great talent.
Common Nouns vs. Proper Nouns • A common noun is an ordinary person, place or thing. A common noun is not capitalized. (boy, city, house) • A proper noun is a specific person, place or thing. A proper noun is capitalized. (Sam, Nashua, The White House)
Common Noun and Proper Noun • holiday = common noun • Valentine’s Day = proper noun
Common Noun and Proper Noun • tower = common noun • Eiffel Tower = proper noun
Common Noun and Proper Noun • doctor = a common noun • Dr. Ed Jones = a proper noun
Common and Proper Nouns • doctor • lady • building • city • shoe • college • girl • boy • Dr. Paine • Mrs. Jones • The Capital Building • Nashua, NH • Adidas • Rivier College • Mary • James
Singular and Plural Nouns • Singular means ONE • ONE crazy guy… • Plural means MORE THAN ONE • TWO crazy guys… • There are rules to making Singular nouns into plural nouns.
Singular or Plural? • cats • baby • church • tables • books • Bus • man • oranges • dog • bananas
If a noun ends with “s”“x”“ch” or “sh”, add “ES” to make it plural: • s • buses • x • taxes • ch • benches • sh • dishes
Add ies to make nouns plural that end with a consonant and a y: • lady • Ladies • fry • fries
Some nouns that end in f or fe change to ves when made plural: • calf • calves • knife • knives
Some nouns that end in o change to es when made plural. Some change to s: • kangaroo • kangaroos • potato • potatoes
Some nouns do not change at all when made plural: • sheep • sheep • deer • deer
Some nouns change completely when made plural: • man • men • goose • geese
Some nouns don’t fit the rules… • Monkey changes to monkeys not monkies. That’s just the English Language for you!
Can you make these nouns plural? • half • foot • piano • spy • brush
Can you make these nouns plural? • halves • feet • pianos • spies • brushes
Can you make these nouns plural? • mouse • memo • shelf • leaf • child
Can you make these nouns plural? • mice • memos • shelves • leaves • children
Can you make these nouns plural? • thief • woman • fish • photo • die
Can you make these nouns plural? • thieves • women • fish • photos • dice
Collective Nouns… When you collect something, you put together a group of more than one. Collective means a group. Collective nouns are “groups of something.” Here are some collective nouns: herd fleet colony tribe pack family team flock group army mob class
Possessive Nouns… I believe that belongs to me…
Possessive Nouns… I am Bob and this is my towel. A possessive noun is a noun that shows ownership. To “possess” means to own or to have.
Possessive Nouns… To show ownership, an apostrophe is used. Most people have a hard time putting the apostrophe in the correct place! The rule for the apostrophe depends on whether the noun is singular or plural.
Possessive Singular Nouns I am one boy and this is my shirt. Use an apostrophe with -s for possessives of singular nouns. SINGULAR MEANS ONE. Use an apostrophe plus -s to show the possessive form of a singular noun, even if that singular noun already ends in -s: Frank’s crayon my friend’s dad Robert Frost’s poetry today's weather report the boss's problem Star Jones's talk show That boy’s shirt
Possessive Plural Nouns Use an apostrophe without an -s for most possessives plural nouns. PLURAL MEANS MORE THAN ONE. To form the possessive of a plural noun that already ends in -s, add an apostrophe: the girls' swing set (the swing set belonging to the girls) the students' projects (the projects belonging to the students) the Johnsons' house (the house belonging to the Johnsons) If the plural noun does not end in -s, add an apostrophe plus -s: women's conference (the conference belonging to the women) the children's toys (the toys belonging to the children) the men's training camp (the training camp belonging to the men)
Singular Possessive vs. Plural Possessive Basically…. The project belonging to more than one student: (plural) The students’ project The apostrophe comes after the s. The project belonging to one student: (singular) The student’s project The apostrophe comes before the s.
Singular Possessive vs. Plural Possessive The shoes belonging to many women: WOMEN’S SHOES The apostrophe comes before the s because the noun is a collective group and has no s on the end. It would be “ladies’ shoes if the base word was lady.: Lady’s shoes (the shoes belonging to one lady) Ladies’ shoes (the shoes belonging to more than one lady. Finally…. The shoes belonging to one woman: WOMAN’S SHOES
Can you make this sentence possessive? • Adam owns that car.
Answer: • That is Adam's car.
Which answer best fits in the blank? ____________ bicycle is broken. A. Seths' B. Sethes C. Seths D. Seth's
Which answer best fits in the blank? ____________ bicycle is broken. A. Seths' B. Sethes C. Seths D. Seth's
Which answer best fits in the blank? The trash can will attract a lot of ____________ if you leave the lid off. A.flys B. flies C.flie's D. fly's
Which answer best fits in the blank? The trash can will attract a lot of ____________ if you leave the lid off. A.flys B.flies C.flie's D. fly's
Which answer best fits in the blank? The ____________________ skin is red. A. tomatoes B. tomato's C. tomatos' D. tomatos's
Which answer best fits in the blank? The ____________________ skin is red. A. tomatoes B.tomato's C.tomatos' D.tomatos's
Which answer best fits in the blank? Emily has two hamsters named Barry and Steve. The ____________________ cage looks like a tiny house. A. hamsters' B. hamsters C. hamster's D.hamsterers