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						| A noun is a part of speech used to name a person, place, thing, quality, or action. A noun can function as a subject, object, complement, appositive, or object of a preposition. |  
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												|  | Nouns |  |  
												|  | It can be singular or plural. |  |  
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												|  | Plural nouns usually add ‘-s’ to the end of the word, except for irregular nouns. |  |  
										
											
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															| Singular | Plural |  
															| Tooth | Teeth |  
															| Fish | Fish |  
															| Woman | Women |  
															| Man | Men |  |  |  |    |  
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												|  | Types of nouns |  |  
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															| (a) | Abstract |  
															| (b) | Collective |  
															| (c) | Compound |  
															| (d) | Common |  |  |  |    |  
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												|  | Abstract nouns |  |  
												|  | Used to describe something that cannot be seen or touched. It is used to describe qualities, states, and events, or actions. |  |  
												|  | Examples: Freedom, love, courage |  |  
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												|  | Collective nouns |  |  
												|  | Used to represent a group of people or things. |  |  
												|  | Examples: Family, flock, audience |  |  |  |  
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												|  | Compound nouns |  |  
												|  | Nouns that are made up of two or more words. |  |  
												|  | Example: sister-in-law, schoolboy, fruit juice |  |  
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															|  | Common nouns |  |  
															|  | A name given to every person, place, object, or animal of the same kind of group. |  |  
															|  | Example: table, market, John, Paris, giraffe |  |  
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												|  | Countable nouns |  |  
												|  | Refer to objects that can be counted in numbers. |  |  
												|  | There are two types: SIngular countable nouns Plural countable nouns |  |  
										
											
												|  | Example of plural countable nouns: friends, houses, buses |  |  |  |  
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												|  | Uncountable nouns |  |  
												|  | Refer to objects that cannot be counted in numbers. |  |  
												|  | There is only one type; Singular, uncountable nouns. |  |  
										
											
												|  | Example: money, water, love |  |  |  |  |