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Notes on Nouns. We use nouns all of the time when we write e-mails to friends or papers for class. (For example, there are many nouns in this paragraph).

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Presentation on theme: "Notes on Nouns. We use nouns all of the time when we write e-mails to friends or papers for class. (For example, there are many nouns in this paragraph)."— Presentation transcript:

1 Notes on Nouns

2 We use nouns all of the time when we write e-mails to friends or papers for class. (For example, there are many nouns in this paragraph). We will look at some mistakes that students frequently make with nouns- and I’ll give you some pointers on how to avoid making those mistakes when you write.

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4  Person, place, thing, idea, or quality Idea: democracy, truth, illusion, fantasy Quality: beauty, hatred, boredom

5  Common: begins with a lower case letter  Proper: begins with a capital letter  Rules for when to capitalize certain words: Names of specific people  Caps: Tucker, Tori, Juanita  No Caps: family, boy girl, sister, cousin WHAT ABOUT MOM AND DAD? Capitalize them when you’re calling your parent’s name but not when you refer to them as “my mom” or “my dad”

6 Days of the week, months, and holidays, but not seasons  Caps: Monday, December, Passover, Easter  No Caps: autumn, fall, spring, winter Ranks and titles, but only when used with a particular person’s name  Caps: This is Doctor Smith and this is Aunt Anne.  No Caps: That man is my doctor and that woman is my aunt. Specific geographic areas: cities, states, countries, counties, rivers, oceans, streets, parks, etc.  Caps: North Dakota, Ohio River, Atlantic Ocean  No Caps: The ocean is deep. Regions of the U.S., but not simple directions  Caps: I was born in the Midwest, but I grew up in the North.  No Caps: I live on the north side of town.

7 Historical periods  Caps: the Renaissance, World War II, the Middle Ages  No Caps: It was a long war. We live in the age of computers. Religions, nationalities, races of people, languages, countries Various names for God and the names of sacred books  Caps: God, Jehovah, Allah, the Bible, the Koran  No Caps: There are many gods and goddesses in “The Odyssey” Specific school courses, but not general subjects  Caps: I am taking Algebra 101.  No Caps: I am taking algebra and history. Names of specific schools, businesses, buildings, organizations, etc.  Caps: Apple Computer, Western Sierra Collegiate Academy  No Caps: I want a new computer. That building is the middle school.

8 Brand names Names of planets, but not sun and moon and sometimes not earth  Caps: Jupiter, Mars, Venus…  No Caps: The moon is bright tonight. More than six billion people live on the earth. Letters that stand alone  T-shirt, X-ray Names of specific teams and clubs and their members  Caps: the Atlanta Braves, the Republican Party  No Caps: I play on a baseball team Titles of movies, books, chapters, and articles

9  Possessive: shows ownership (Mr. Odell’s wrath, dog’s toy, sun’s beauty)  Concrete: You can experience this group of nouns and you see them and feel them (tangible).  Abstract: You cannot experience abstract nouns (disapproval, anger, hope, sweetness).

10  Turn to the person sitting next to you and create two sentences using all of the types of nouns in each one.  Make sure the sentences are challenging because you will be giving them to another partnership to figure out.

11  A common, abstract noun  A possessive, proper noun  A common, concrete noun  Another abstract noun

12  A possessive, common noun  A common noun that is commonly mistaken for a proper noun  Write out a noun and, next to it, write out the type


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