NOUNS
Definition: A noun is a word (or phrase or clause) that
names a person, place, think, idea, or quality.
There are several categories of nouns:
Common – every day words, not capitalized (ex: dog, cat, building, town, man, woman)
Proper – specific names, capitalized (ex: Spot, Fluffy, Empire State Building,
Northfield, Mr. Jones, Sally Forth)
Compound – nouns made up of two or more words
(ex: ice cream, playground, mainstream,
brother-in-law)
Collective – nouns that in its singular form denotes
many within (ex: army, company, herd)
Concrete – tangible, touchable things (ex: rock, ball, bird, house)
Abstract – a quality or idea; something that cannot be
touched (ex: liberty, hope, honesty,
love)
Countable – nouns that form their plural with an s or
es, that can be counted and numbered (ex:
bugs, projects, boys, girls)
Non-countable – nouns that have no plural and cannot be
counted (ex: poverty, peace, ideas,
principles)
Nouns can be used as subjects of a sentence, direct
objects, indirect objects, objects of a preposition, and predicate nouns.
In
the following sentences, the nouns are underlined and in bold:
·
The dog
under the tree had a leash around his neck.
·
My dog,
Scooby, wanted freedom from his collar.
·
The playground
in Northfield had a statue of General Washington
who fought for liberty.
·
Sarge’s Parlour, a small business, sold ice cream in Storm
Lake, Iowa to many generations
of residents.
·
My brother
bought a snowmobile because
he wanted to have fun during
the winter.
Some
words can be both a noun and a verb.
Examples:
I had a swim in the lake.
I swim in the lake.
I will drive to school.
We had a nice drive.
I watched the third act of the play.
This man can really act.
I wrote a check at the diner.
Will you check to see if it is right.
I have a new dress from Target.
The doctor will dress my wound.
She has a delightful laugh.
I laugh all the time.
PRONOUNS
Definition: A Pronoun is a word that takes the place of a
nouns. We can substitute a pronoun for a
noun in a sentence. Pronouns are
classified in five (5) different categories. They are personal
pronouns, relative pronouns, demonstrative pronouns, indefinite pronouns, and
interrogative pronouns.
Antecedent: The antecedent is the word or words that the
pronoun is substituting.
Examples:
The lady drank her coffee. She said it was hot. (lady is the antecedent for her & she;
coffee is the antecedent for it)
Roger sat on the chair, but it broke when he sat
down. (Roger is the antecedent for he; chair is the antecedent for it)
Below
is a chart showing the forms of personal pronouns
Personal Pronouns
|
||||||
|
Singular
|
Plural
|
||||
Person
|
Nominative
|
Objective
|
Possessive
|
Nominative
|
Objective
|
Possessive
|
1st
person
|
I
|
me
|
mine
|
We
|
us
|
ours
|
2nd
person
|
You
|
you
|
yours
|
You
|
you
|
yours
|
3rd
person
|
He, she, it
|
him, her, it
|
his, hers, its
|
They
|
them
|
theirs
|
In
the following sentences, the personal pronouns are underlined and in bold.
·
I
gave her the bottle that used to belong to you.
·
She
knew right away that it was a
collector’s piece.
·
It
had been used by Queen Elizabeth in her
castle.
·
They
say it held the perfume that
she used every day.
·
My
family has had many antiques in their
collection and loves to talk about them.
·
Do you
think she will get any money
for it?
Reflexive pronouns are a compound of personal
pronouns with “self” or “selves.” They
are used when you refer back to the subject of a sentence or clause.
Examples:
·
I saw myself
in the mirror.
·
She made herself some lunch.
·
The bird hurt itself when it flew into the window.
Relative pronouns introduce relative clauses
(dependent clauses that relate the clause to a noun or pronoun in the
sentence). The five relative pronouns
are who, whom, whose, which, that.
Examples:
·
The car that
hit me was yellow.
·
The student whose phone just rang should answer it.
·
Jane is the girl who won the contest.
·
Mr. Jones is a man on whom I can rely.
Demonstrative pronouns are pronouns that point
out. They are this, that, these, and those.
Examples:
·
This
is my hat.
·
I like these,
not those.
·
That
is a great idea.
·
How much money do you want for this?
Indefinite pronouns are
pronouns that do not point out specifically. They point out generally. They
include such words as another,
any, anybody, anyone, anything, both, each, either, everybody, everyone,
everything, many, neither, nobody, none, no one, one, other, others, some,
somebody, and someone.
Examples:
·
Does anyone
have a pencil?
·
Please stand with the others.
·
No one can solve this equation.
·
Both
of you should do the dishes.
Interrogative pronouns ask
questions. Who, whom, whose, which, and what are
interrogative pronouns.
Examples:
·
Who
will give me the money?
·
With whom
are you going to movie?
·
Whose
books are these?
·
What
will you bring to the dinner?
Nouns Practice
Underline the nouns in the
following sentences.
- Our job has become harder
this year.
- Elizabeth looked in her
backpack for her homework.
- This plant looks dead.
- Mrs. Jones called the doctor
from the other clinic.
- Her son bought a cheeseburger
and fries.
Fill in a noun for each of
the following sentences:
- Jane baked the
__________________ yesterday.
- My __________________ ache after gardening.
- The __________________ sang a solo at the concert.
- The __________________ fell
into the river.
- __________________ is my home.
Pronouns Practice
Underline the
pronouns in the following sentences.
1.
Sally, your mother needs you to call her.
2.
Steve brought his own lunch because he is allergic
to most foods.
3.
I have strong opinions, but my sister doesn’t agree
with them.
4.
The amazing performance brought the crowd to its
feet.
5.
You can tell her because she will keep it a secret.
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