A noun is a word for a person, place, or thing. Everything we can see or talk about is represented by a word which names it. That "naming word" is called a noun.
Yes, the noun 'need' is an abstract noun, sometimes called an 'idea' noun'.The noun 'need' is a a word for a circumstance in which something is necessary, or that requires some course of action; a word for a concept.
An adjectival noun is a noun which functions as an adjective to describe another noun.A noun that functions as an adjective is called an attributive noun or a noun adjunct.Some examples are:almond cookiesschool buildingroad hogcomputer keyboard
A noun used to describe another noun is called an attributive noun (or noun adjunct).Examples of nouns used to describe the noun diamond are:marquis diamondfair trade diamondbaseball diamondengagement diamond
The noun 'warmth' is an uncountable noun, a word for a quality.The noun 'warmth' is expressed by a partitive noun (also called a noun counter) a noun used to count or quantify an uncountable noun, for example 'great warmth' or 'a little warmth'.
It's called a gerund. All verbs ending in ~ing and used as nouns are gerunds.
A noun is called a naming word because a noun is a word for (what you call) a person, a place or a thing.
Several is a modifier of a noun, called an adjective, not a noun.
The noun or pronoun that follows a preposition is called the object of the preposition.
Yes it is called a proper noun.
There is no noun called a 'fern noun'. It's possible the it means 'fern, noun', that is, the word 'fern' is a noun.
A noun that completes an action is called a subject, as it performs the action in a sentence.
Jealousy is a noun. It is properly called an abstract noun.
Yes, the noun 'excitement' is an abstract noun (also called an idea noun); a word for an emotion.
The noun Christmas is a proper, abstract noun (sometimes called an idea noun); a word for a concept.
A proper noun is a specific name, not a name of a category of things. Herbert Hoover is a proper noun. Reptiles is a plural noun. It is properly called a noun, but is not classed as a "proper noun".
Yes, thinking is an abstract noun, a verbal noun called a gerund.
a clause that modify or identify a noun or a noun phrase is called NC in apposition