Nouns are used for
- People
- Places
- Things
- Qualities
- Concepts such as topics
- Feelings such as cold or hot
Nouns can be categorised in different ways:
Proper nouns or common nouns
All other nouns are common nouns, these are every day objects such as chair, coffee, cup.
Concrete nouns or abstract nouns
Concrete nouns are things you can feel or touch such as a bed, the floor, your house.Abstract nouns are ideas such as feelings and topics.
Note that nouns can come under multiple categories so for example, a bed is a common noun and a concrete noun.
Countable nouns or uncountable nouns
Uncountable nouns (sometimes called mass nouns or non-count nouns) are things that you cannot count such as the air, sand or water.
Groups of certain things are uncountable for example money remains singular even if you are talking about having a lot of it, such as coins. Other examples of uncountable group nouns are traffic and sheep. (If you cannot add an 's' at the end, it is uncountable)
Countable or count nouns are things you can count such as vehicles, furniture or t-shirts.
Again nouns can come under different types and depending on the content in which it is used.
Thought is an abstract noun that is also uncountable when it is used as 'I was deep in thought' but if it used as 'I had three thoughts', it is an abstract, countable noun.
T-shirts is a concrete, countable noun but clothing is a concrete, uncountable noun.
Note that in different languages, there are different definitions, so some nouns may be uncountable in English but in another language it is a countable noun (for example, when in another language, they add an 'a' before nouns that in English you would not).
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