Without nouns, literature itself would be impossible.
English grammar is the rules of the language - things like "verbs and nouns agree in number" or "the goes in front of the noun not after it". English literature is books, etc, written in English.
English language is an international language that everyone has to utilize for communication.
Literature in English is the writing written in English, but English in literature is the overall English literature that there is in the general category of "literature."
The general rule is that you capitalise only proper nouns. You do not capitalise "literature" unless the context requires it. For example: I am taking English Literature in my first year of college. I don't really like literature, but I need to fulfill my English credits. There were no other literature classes that appealed to me except English Literature.
The types of nouns in English are:commonpropersingularpluralpossessivecollectiveconcreteabstract
The English language does not have feminine nouns
Thomas Thrasher has written: 'William Shakespeare' -- subject(s): Authors, English, Biography, Dramatists, English, English Authors, English Dramatists, Juvenile literature 'Gunfighters of the American West' -- subject(s): Juvenile literature, Biography, Peace officers, Outlaws, Frontier and pioneer life, Robbers and outlaws 'Understanding Macbeth' -- subject(s): Juvenile literature, In literature, Theater, Tragedy, History 'Understanding Romeo and Juliet' -- subject(s): Juvenile literature, English literature, Tragedy, History and criticism 'The Importance Of Series - William Shakespeare' -- subject(s): Juvenile literature, English Dramatists, Biography, English Authors
Some English nouns that end with -ie are:auntiebeaniebirdieboogiebookiebootiebourgeoisiebriebrowniebudgiecaloriecamaraderiecolliecookiecooliecootiecutiedogiefaeriefoodiefootsiegeniehankiehoagiejalousieladdielassielielingeriemenagerirenecktienewbienightieoldieorangeriepiepinkiepixieprairiepreemieramieroadierookiesortiespeciestogiesweetietieveggiezombie
masculine and feminine
Spelling, English
There is English grammar and there is English literature. Literature is reading.
Not in English. In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for a male or a female. A number of the languages from which English nouns come to us have masculine and feminine forms and in some of those languages, feminine nouns do end with a.