The noun 'book' is a word for a thing.
A person is a human or a character, living or dead, real or fictional.
A place is a location.
In grammar, "person," "place," and "thing" are known as nouns. Nouns are words used to name a person (like "Mary"), place (like "Paris"), or thing (like "book"). They can be used in sentences as subjects, objects, or to show possession.
Person: John, teacher Place: London, park Thing: car, book Idea: love, freedom
there are two nouns. "MOMMY" and "BOOK". you know if somethings a noun if the word is 'a person place or thing'. FOR EXAMPLE... you can replace mommy with *someone* and you can replace the word book with *it* mommy is a person and book is a thing.
a person and a thing
A memorial is a place that honors a person, event, or thing.
thing
A noun is a word that represents a person, place, thing, or idea.
Yes. (person, place or thing & it IS a thing)
Place
I believe a book falls under the category "person, place, or thing" and therefore is a noun.
A namesake is when a person, place, or thing is named after another person, place, or thing.
Sunscreen is a noun, it is a thing, not a person or place. A noun is a person, place or thing.