No, it is not. The important thing is to use the nouns that are most appropriate to convey the information that you want to impart.
You can't tell how you hurt yourself or how to boil an egg using all abstract nouns; and you can't explain your hopes and dreams, your experiences or your feelings using all concrete nouns.
Both concrete and abstract nouns are words for things. Both concrete and abstract nouns can be singular or plural. Both concrete and abstract nouns can be common nouns or proper nouns. Both concrete and abstract nouns function in a sentence as the subject of the sentence or clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.
Abstract nouns:educationtroubleConcrete nouns: elevatortree
Is Chicago a abstract noun or a concrete noun
The abstract nouns in the sentence are:justiceprincipledemocracyAll of these nouns are words for concepts. There are no concrete nouns in the sentence.
The abstract nouns for these concrete nouns are:motherhoodpriesthoodfriendship
Comfort is an abstract noun. It refers to a state of ease or relief rather than a tangible object that can be physically touched or measured. Unlike concrete nouns, which denote physical items, abstract nouns represent ideas, feelings, or qualities.
"Need" is an abstract noun. It refers to a concept or state of requiring something, rather than a physical object that can be touched or seen. Abstract nouns represent ideas, qualities, or conditions, which distinguishes them from concrete nouns that denote tangible items.
abstract nouns refer to thing that are not concrete;
Abstract nouns
There is no abstract noun in that phrase. Both box and pencils are 'concrete' nouns. An abstract noun is a noun that cannot be perceived with our senses - 'luck', and 'hope' are abstract nouns, they are concepts rather than physical 'things'.
You don't, some nouns are abstract some are concrete. Abstract nouns are nouns that refer to something we cannot see or touch; they're ideas, feelings, concepts. Concrete nouns can be used in an abstract concept such as the concrete noun road as 'the road to happiness', or the concrete noun bucket as 'a bucket of dreams'. The concept has changed, not the word.
The same articles are used for abstract nouns as for concrete nouns. Examples:the theorya brainstorman accident