un exemple
un mur (a wall)
un bureau (a desk or an office)
un téléphone
un agent de police (a policeman)
un professeur (a teacher) et un élève (a pupil)
un crayon, un stylo, un cahier (a pen, a biro, a notebook)
un footballeur (a footballer)
un homme (a man)
un chien (a dog)
le soleil (the sun)
une clé (a key)
une montre (a watch)
une voiture (a car)
une chaise (a chair)
une professeur et une élève (a female teacher and pupil - working as masculine or feminine nouns)
une gomme (an eraser)
une femme (a woman)
une chienne (she-dog)
la lune (the moon)
une question, une réponse (a question, an answer)
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female. Some examples of gender specific nouns are: boar/sow boy/girl brother/sister buck/doe bull/cow cock/hen count/countess father/mother gentleman/lady groom/bride husband/wife king/queen lord/lady man/woman nephew/niece peacock/peahen rooster/hen stallion/mare uncle/aunt widower/widow
Regular nouns are nouns that are made plural by adding -s or -es to the end of the word. Some examples are:singular: pluralcake: cakesdog: dogsplan: planscookie: cookiesOreo: Oreostrain: trainsstore: storeslanguage: languagesshoe: shoesReebok: Reeboksmonth: monthsday: daysstar: starsblock: blocksfarm: farmscar: carsHonda: Hondasheart: heartsidea: ideasriver: rivers
Some examples of different types of plural noun forms:singular: pluralday: daysphoto: photosclass: classesbox: boxeshero: heroestomato: tomatoesbaby: babiesstory: storieslife: livescalf: calvesfoot: feetmouse: micechild: childrenox: oxencrisis: crisesoasis: oasesdatum: datamedium: mediacriterion: criteriaformula: formulae
1. chocolate 2. dog 3. family 4. tree 5. pen 6. door 7. chair 8. table 9. fork 10. knife 11. bottle 12. can 13. keyboard 14. boot 14. skirt 15. hard-drive 16. bird 17. man 18. woman 19. dirt 20. sand noun = object, living organism, instruments etc
A ship, being a non-living, 'inanimate' object, is genderless, i.e. neither masculine nor feminine. Therefore most people refer to a ship as it.e.g. "At 11:40 p.m. Newfoundland time and two and a half hours ahead of Central Time the Titanic struck an iceberg and two hours and 40 minutes later at 2:20 a.m. on April 15, 1912 itsank." -Chicago Sun-Times online, April 15, 2011.However, sailors and those in the shipping/sailing world often refer to boats and ships by using feminine gender pronouns. (e.g. she, her etc)e.g. "Titanic had left her dock and tugs had positioned her to face downstream. As she picked up speed..." -'Titanic Stories', Titanic website.Some also use feminine terminology when referring to cars or countries:"I have an old Saab. She runs well...""Britain to glory in her history at today's wedding" -The Tribune, May 29, 2011, reporting on the royal wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton.Usage of she/her for ships, cars and countries is simply 'customary usage', a traditional style which, by using the feminine gender, imputes a degree of 'personality' to the object, much more so than by referring to the object simply as an 'it.'--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------(See Related links below for references)
Examples of nouns are:anarchyanimositybeautybraverycommunismconceptcuriositydemocracydisciplineemotionfeelingfreedomfriendlinessfriendshipfungoalHappinessHatehonestyhonor
Idea nouns are abstract nouns, names for specific persons, places, things, or titles. Examples:agonybargaincheerdogmaeducationfungratitudehopeignorancejoyknowledgelovemadnessnatureorganizationpityquestionragestrengthtrust
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female. Some examples of gender specific nouns are: boar/sow boy/girl brother/sister buck/doe bull/cow cock/hen count/countess father/mother gentleman/lady groom/bride husband/wife king/queen lord/lady man/woman nephew/niece peacock/peahen rooster/hen stallion/mare uncle/aunt widower/widow
Ventottesimo in the masculine and ventottesima in the feminine are Italian equivalents of the English word "twenty-eighth (28th)."Specifically, the number venti means "twenty (20)." The number otto means "eight (8)." The masculine suffix --esimo and the feminine --esima translate as the English suffix "-th."The pronunciation is "VEHN-toht-TEH-see-moh" in the masculine and "VEHN-toht-TEH-see-mah" in the feminine.
Examples of nouns that are things are:applebraverycowdresseducationfudgegreenhouseicejokekneelettermousenounonionpennyquestionrosesteelturtle
Certainly! Here are 20 examples of common nouns: dog, cat, house, car, tree, book, city, school, teacher, student, phone, table, water, food, friend, computer, bicycle, shirt, and music. Common nouns refer to general items or categories rather than specific names. They are not capitalized unless they begin a sentence.
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for a male or a female. Examples of gender nouns are:male: femalebilly goat: nanny goatboar: sow (pig, hog, bear, or badger)buck: doe (deer, antelope, hare, or rabbit)bull: cow (cattle, buffalo, bison, elephant, hippo, giraffe, camel, elk, moose, yak, dolphin, whale, walrus, or alligator)cob: pen (swan)cock (rooster): hen (chicken, crow, dove, finch, gull, heron, hummingbird, jay, lark, nightingale, ostrich, parrot, pigeon, squab, or quail)dog: bitch (dog or wolf)drake: duck (hen)drone: queen and workerfox (reynard or dog): vixengander: goosejack: jenny (donkey)lion: lionesspeacock: peahenram: ewe (sheep)stallion: mare (horse or zebra)tiger: tigresstom: hen (turkey)tomcat: queen (or cat)
Special nouns, often referred to as proper nouns, are specific names of people, places, organizations, or titles. Here are a few examples in sentences: "Yesterday, I visited the Eiffel Tower in Paris." "Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his famous speech at the Lincoln Memorial." "My favorite book is 'Pride and Prejudice' by Jane Austen." "Every summer, we vacation at Lake Tahoe."
I believe this question is missing a list of words, as there are more than three words that are not nouns (as there are over 20, not including pronouns, in this sentence alone).However, just for fun, here are three words that are not nouns that begin with the letter w:WigglyWhiffedWeird
Venti is an Italian equivalent of the English number "twenty (20)."Specifically, the Italian word may serve as an adjective or a masculine noun. In both cases, the form is always the same regardless of whether the individuals or objects are feminine or masculine. In both cases, the pronunciation remains the same: "VEHN-tee."
Examples of collective nouns for places are: a block of flats a belt of asteroids a constellation of stars a chain of islands a chain of mountains a field of corn a forest of trees a library of books a union of states a confederation of states an alliance of countries a range of mountains a row of shops a string of islands a network of roads an orchard of apples
"Twenty" is an English equivalent of the Italian number venti.Specifically, the Italian word may serve as an adjective or a masculine noun. In both cases, the form is always the same regardless of whether the individuals or objects are feminine or masculine. In both cases, the pronunciation remains the same: "VEHN-tee."