the part of speech that is used to name a person, place, thing, quality, or action and can function as the subject or object of a verb, the object of a preposition, or an appositive.
A part of speech that names a person, place, thing, idea, animal, quality, or action: Mary, America, apples, justice, goose, strength, departure, NASA, breakthrough, buddy system, sister-in-law. Noun-making suffixes are -ance, -ation, -ence, -ism, -ity
The name of a person, place, thing, quality or action. Secretary, desk, computer, Redmond, technology, frustration.
an inflected part of speech marking a person, place, thing, idea, action, or feeling, and usually serving as subject, object, or complement. A common noun is a general term: e.g., dog, paper, automobile. A proper noun is a specific name: e.g., Mary, Sudhury, Skidoo.
The lexical category of Noun (N) consists of words such as John, truth and electron. In Universal Grammar theory, a noun is the head of a lexical phrase, the Noun Phrase. It can also be thought of as a potential Subject of the sentence, The truth hurts.
A word that represents a person, place, thing, or idea. example: A noun is a word that represents a person, place, thing, or idea.
a word that can be used to refer to a person or place or thing
a word that can serve as the subject or object of a verb
a name for someone or something
a name of anything A school, garden, kites or king
a name word, representing directly to the mind an object, substance, or idea
a naming word, a word that identifies a person, place, thing, or abstract idea
an object, a thing, such as a tree, or a badminton racquet
a part of discourse indicating a person or thing
a person, a place, a thing, or an abstract concept
a person ( brother ), a place ( kitchen ) or a thing ( table )
a word that denotes somebody or something
a word that describes a tangible object or idea
a word which is used to identify or name something
A noun is a concrete thing, for example, a chair, table or bed, or an abstract term such as love, war and death.
(nombre, sustantivo) One of the traditional parts of speech. Nouns typically denote things, people, animals or abstract concepts; they function as subjects and objects of verbs.
A word which refers to a thing, person, or idea, e.g. car, daughter, friendship."
The name of a person, place, or thing. A proper belongs to a particular individual; a common noun identifies a member of a group. Mark sold his store.
A word that refers to people, places, things and ideas and functions as a subject or object is a noun.
A noun is a word that means a thing, either concrete or abstract. A noun can be the subject or the object of a sentence in English. Book, money, PC, and web site are all nouns. A proper noun is a noun that is the name of a person or a thing. In English, proper nouns are always written with a capital letter at the beginning. John, Japan, and IBM are all proper nouns.
A word which can be used with an article, most often the name of people or things. See also , abstract noun, agent noun, collective noun, concrete noun, proper noun.
a word that names an object
A word that names a person, place, thing, or idea. Most nouns have a plural form and a possessive form. Carol; the park; the cup; democracy.
A word that is the class name of something: a person, place, thing, or idea. See Adjective, Adverb, Verb
"naming words" like "king", "horses", "hunger"
A word which names something.
word that is the name of something (as a person, animal, place, thing, quality, idea, or action). All of the nouns in this definition are emphasized.
A category of a word which typically denotes an entity (person/place/thing). The classic defining aspect of Nouns is that they are countable [+Count]--i.e., they take on Number: N+{s} = Plural. However, there is a class of Nouns called Mass Noun s which don't take the plural {s}--e.g., furniture/sand etc.
A word that is used to name a person, place, thing, quality, or action, for example, house, flammability, or movement.
the name of a thing, person, place
a word which refers to a person (e.g. programmer), thing (e.g. computer), substance (e.g. ink), place (e.g. library) or quality (e.g. length)
A noun is a word which can inflect for number and which usually names people, places or things. See also
a word which names an object
A noun names a person, place, or thing. Plato, Rio, fire, peace
A word that stands for a "person, place or thing," actually any creature, plant, object, substance, or concept.
A word that refers to a person, place, thing, event, substance or quality. 'Doctor', 'tree', 'party', 'coal' and 'beauty' are all nouns. noun phrase is a group of words in a sentence which together behave as a noun. In the sentences 'We took the night train' and 'Do you know the man sitting in the corner', 'the night train' and 'the man sitting in the corner' are noun phrases.
The name of an object, concept, or entity eg. (a) walk; house; microphone; concept; thinker; proposition; (an) attack
A digitally recorded representation of a sound. Also, a single word of the data that makes up such a recording. See word. Verb: To make a digital recording. See sampling.
countable nouns uncountable nouns noun group
A word like table, dog, teacher, America etc. A noun is the name of an object, concept, person or place. A "concrete noun" is something you can see or touch like a person or car. An "abstract noun" is something that you cannot see or touch like a decision or happiness. A "countable noun" is something that you can count (for example: bottle, song, dollar). An "uncountable noun" is something that you cannot count (for example: water, music, money).
In English, a noun or noun substantive is a lexical category which can co-occur with (in)definite articles and attributive adjectives, and function as the head of a noun phrase.