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Published byGabriel Lloyd Modified over 9 years ago
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NOUNS WHAT IS A NOUN?
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A noun is a word that names a person, a place, or a thing. How many nouns are in the following sentence? The birds rested in their nests in the trees by my house.
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PRACTICE The birds rested in their nests in the trees by my house. There were 4 nouns in that sentence.
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EXAMPLES Persons: girl, student, Ms. Knapp, policeman Places:school, park, Dearborn, Alaska Things: flag, book, pencil
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COMMON AND PROPER NOUNS
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COMMON VS. PROPER A common noun is used when you are talking about persons, places, or things in general. A proper noun is used when you are talking about specific persons, places, or things.
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COMMON VS. PROPER Are the following words common or proper? school october monday frog los angelos beach
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SINGULAR AND PLURAL NOUNS
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SINGULAR VS. PLURAL A singular noun names one place, person, thing, or idea. A plural noun names more than one place, person, thing, or idea.
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RULES FOR CHANGING SINGULAR TO PLURAL For most nouns, you just need to add an “s” to the end of the word. kid kids park parks car cars
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RULES FOR CHANGING SINGULAR TO PLURAL For nouns ending in s, x, ch, or sh, you need to add an “-es” to the end of the word. cross crosses tax taxes bunch bunches hush hushes
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RULES FOR CHANGING SINGULAR TO PLURAL For nouns ending in a vowel and a y, add “–s”. key keys toy toys pray prays
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RULES FOR CHANGING SINGULAR TO PLURAL For nouns ending in a consonant and a y, change the y to an i and add “–es”. sky skies try tries imply implies
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RULES FOR CHANGING SINGULAR TO PLURAL For nouns ending in f or fe, change the f to a v and add “es”; for other nouns, just add “s”. life lives half halves sniff sniffs
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RULES FOR CHANGING SINGULAR TO PLURAL For nouns ending in a vowel and o, add “s”. rodeo rodeos radio radios
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RULES FOR CHANGING SINGULAR TO PLURAL For nouns ending in a consonant and o, add “s” or “-es”. solo solos tomato tomatoes potato potatoes piano pianos
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RULES FOR CHANGING SINGULAR TO PLURAL Some nouns have unique changes from singular to plural. mouse mice goose geese octopus octopi foot feet
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RULES FOR CHANGING SINGULAR TO PLURAL Some nouns stay the same from singular to plural. deer deer moose moose fish fish
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SINGULAR POSSESSIVE NOUNS
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WHAT IS A SINGULAR POSSESSIVE NOUN? It shows that one person, place, or thing has or owns something. To show ownership, add an apostrophe and an s (‘s)
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EXAMPLES The fur of the dog The dog’s fur The tail of the fox The fox’s tail
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EXAMPLES The name of the dog The dog’s name The class of Ms. Knapp Ms. Knapp’s class
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PLURAL POSSESSIVE NOUNS
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WHAT IS A PLURAL POSSESSIVE NOUN? It shows ownership of a plural noun. If it ends in an “s” already, just add an apostrophe. If it doesn’t end in an “s”, add an apostrophe and an s.
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EXAMPLES The yards of the neighbors The people’s names The cars of the teachers The teachers’ cars
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EXAMPLES The names of the people The neighbor’s yards The crayons of the children The children’s crayons
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