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Noun: it is a noun, an object or a person, not an adjective or a verb. Words such as "Peter", "bread", "flower" and "car" are all nouns.

Singular: it is not plural, just one.

As for "nominative"... Nominative means the word is serving as a SUBJECT in the sentence, the one doing the action.

It is a terminology that applies only to languages that have "grammatical cases", such as Latin, classical Arabic and some Eastern European languages: this means a word slightly changes (usually in the ending) according to the purpose they serve in a sentence.

In latin if you want to say Peter is a good guy, you should say

Petrus est homo bonus.

Where "Petrus", the subject of the sentence, is a nominative singular noun :-)

hope that helped

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