Well, honey, in that sentence, the nouns are "school," "love," and "books." But if you want to get technical, "She" and "rural school" could also be considered nouns. So take your pick, darling.
School and books. I think so?
The common nouns in the sentence are:houseschool
Well, darling, in the sentence "Clara Barton was born in Massachusetts," the nouns are "Clara Barton" and "Massachusetts." Clara Barton is a proper noun because it's a specific name, while Massachusetts is a common noun because it's a general name for a place. Hope that clears things up for you, sugar.
There are three nouns. James Ullman (proper noun), books, and stories are nouns.
Sara, books, library. (Any person, place, or thing.)
The nouns are: principal school students class
Concrete nouns in the sentence are: library, books, justice, freedom, equality, values, America.
library,books,america
man, people, truth
There are no proper nouns in the sentence. A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing. The nouns in the sentence (brother, school, and fall) are common nouns; brother and school are not specified by name.
A person can find a list of common nouns in any grade school text books. Local libraries will also have books that have lists of common nouns.
Some words come from other languages, such as Spanish and French