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  2. Noun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noun

    Examples of count nouns are chair, nose, and occasion. Mass nouns or uncountable (non-count) nouns differ from count nouns in precisely that respect: they cannot take plurals or combine with number words or the above type of quantifiers. For example, the forms a furniture and three furnitures are not used – even though pieces of furniture can ...

  3. English grammar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_grammar

    Many common suffixes form nouns from other nouns or from other types of words, such as -age (shrinkage), -hood (sisterhood), and so on, [3] though many nouns are base forms containing no such suffix (cat, grass, France). Nouns are also created by converting verbs and adjectives, as with the words talk and reading (a boring talk, the assigned ...

  4. English nouns - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_nouns

    A Comprehensive Grammar of the English Language illustrates the gradience from verbal nouns to verbs in their present participle forms, with the earlier examples behaving more like nouns and the later examples behaving more like verbs: [58] some paintings of Brown’s; Brown’s paintings of his daughters

  5. List of adjectival and demonymic forms for countries and ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_adjectival_and...

    Singular forms simply remove the final s or, in the case of -ese endings, are the same as the plural forms. The ending -men has feminine equivalent -women (e.g. Irishman , Scotswoman ). The French terminations -ois / -ais serve as both the singular and plural masculine ; adding e ( -oise / -aise ) makes them singular feminine; es ( -oises ...

  6. English plurals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_plurals

    For example, in Spanish, nouns composed of a verb and its plural object usually have the verb first and noun object last (e.g. the legendary monster chupacabras, literally "sucks-goats", or in a more natural English formation "goatsucker") and the plural form of the object noun is retained in both the singular and plural forms of the compound ...

  7. Vocative case - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vocative_case

    The vocative is distinct in singular and identical to the nominative in the plural, for all inflected nouns. Nouns with a nominative singular ending in -a have a vocative singular usually identically written but distinct in accentuation. In Lithuanian, the form that a given noun takes depends on its declension class and, sometimes, on its gender.