Survey of English Grammar Wiki: Week 4
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Nouns
- Semantic test:
- Nouns name persons, things or places
- Problems:
- Abstract nouns (often properties): honesty, happiness
- Nouns denoting events or activities: party, rodeo, development
- Morphological test:
- Nouns can combine with a plural morpheme (-(e)s) to mark plurality
- Problems:
- not all nouns form plural in -s: children
- not all nouns have singular/plural distinction: milk (no plural); scissors, cattle (no singular); sheep (identical form in sg. and pl.)
- Syntactic test:
- Nouns can occur with the possessive 's, i.e. in the environment: __ 's
- Problem:
- The possessive 's is a phrasal affix, i.e. it attaches to the right edge of a noun phrase, independent of the part of speech of the word at the right edge. We can construct examples where this word is NOT a noun: [a colleague of mine]'s car got stolen.
- Nouns can occur between a determiner and a verb, i.e. in the environment: Det __ V
- Problem:
- not all nouns can combine with a determiner, in particular proper names cannot: (*The) Pat walked.
Subclasses of noun
Common nouns
- Count nouns
- Examples:
- Characteristics:
- Non-count (mass nouns)
- Examples:
- Characteristics:
- Count and Non-count nouns
- Examples:
- Characteristics:
Proper nouns
- Examples:
- Characteristics:
Pronouns
Template:Font | Examples | Characteristics |
Personal | ||
Possessive | mine, yours, his, hers, its, ours, yours, theirs | has the same distribution as an NP, but denotes an entity together with a possessive relation, i.e. mine refers to an entity that belongs to the speaker. |
Reflexive | ends in -self/selves: myself, yourself, herself, himself, itself, ourselves, yourselves, themselves | |
Reciprocal | there are only: each other, one another | |
Relative | ||
Interrogative | who, which, whom, that | stand at the beginning of a relative clause |
Noun Phrases
Exercises on Nouns and NPs