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Types of Nouns

What you'll learn

  • Identify and name five types of nouns
  • Distinguish between countable and uncountable nouns
  • Form correct plurals for regular and irregular nouns
  • Apply noun-verb agreement rules in sentences

Key concepts

The Five Types of Nouns

TypeDefinitionExamples
Common nounGeneral name for a person, place, or thingboy, city, book, river
Proper nounSpecific name of a person, place, or thingRavi, Mumbai, Ganga, Monday
Abstract nounName of a feeling, quality, or idea (cannot be touched)love, honesty, happiness, courage
Collective nounName for a group of people, animals, or thingsteam, flock, bunch, committee
Material nounName of a raw material or substancegold, wood, cotton, water

Rule for proper nouns: Always begin with a capital letter, whether they appear at the start of a sentence or in the middle.


Forming Abstract Nouns

Abstract nouns are often formed from verbs and adjectives using suffixes.

SuffixFrom Verb/AdjectiveAbstract Noun
-nesskindkindness
-itypurepurity
-tion / -ionact / decideaction / decision
-mentamazeamazement
-hoodchildchildhood
-shipfriendfriendship

Common Collective Nouns

GroupCollective Noun
Lionspride
Fishshoal
Beesswarm
Starsgalaxy
Flowersbouquet
Studentsclass
Judgesbench

Countable vs Uncountable Nouns

Countable nouns can be counted: one apple, two books, three chairs.

  • They have a singular and plural form.
  • Use a/an with singular countable nouns.

Uncountable nouns cannot be counted directly: water, air, advice, information, furniture.

  • They have no plural form.
  • Never use a/an directly before them.
  • To express quantity, use partitive expressions.
IncorrectCorrect
Give me an advice.Give me a piece of advice.
I need two furnitures.I need two pieces of furniture.
She gave me informations.She gave me some information.

Tip: When in doubt, ask: "Can I say one _____, two _____s?" If yes, it is countable. If the plural sounds wrong, it is uncountable.


Noun-Verb Agreement (Subject-Verb Agreement)

The verb must agree with the subject noun in number (singular/plural).

SubjectVerb FormExample
Singular nounSingular verb (adds -s/-es)The dog barks loudly.
Plural nounPlural verb (no -s)The dogs bark loudly.
Collective nounUsually singular verbThe team is ready.
"News" / "Mathematics"Always singularThe news is good.
"Scissors" / "Trousers"Always pluralThe scissors are sharp.

Worked Example — Tricky case: "The committee (have/has) decided." → "Committee" is a collective noun treated as singular → has is correct.

Worked Example 2: "Each of the students (is/are) responsible." → "Each" is singular → is is correct.


Plurals: Regular and Irregular

RuleSingularPlural
Add -scat, bookcats, books
Add -es (ends in -s/-x/-ch/-sh)bus, box, watchbuses, boxes, watches
-y → -ies (consonant + y)baby, citybabies, cities
-f/-fe → -vesleaf, wifeleaves, wives
Irregularchild, foot, tooth, mousechildren, feet, teeth, mice
Same singular and pluralsheep, deer, fishsheep, deer, fish

Quick check

  1. Identify the noun type: "The jury gave its verdict."
  2. Is "luggage" countable or uncountable? How would you express "three items of luggage" correctly?
  3. Form the abstract noun from the word "brave."
  4. Choose the correct verb: "A pack of wolves (was/were) howling in the forest."
  5. Give the collective noun for a group of owls and a group of fish.

Open the Practice tab for graded questions on Nouns and Types.

3 topics • Notes • Practice • AI explanations available

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