NOUNS / SUBSTANTIVES

(The word NOUN derives from Latin NOMEN meaning “name“.)

Anoun is any word which names:

aperson, place, thing, idea, animal, quality, activity, state, event, substance,

Distinctive features of nouns:

-noun-forming derivational affixes

-the threefold inflectional sibilant suffix

-marking by determiners

-fixed position in the sentence

-substitutable by pronouns

Some nouns:

- the same form as verbs

- graphically different

- phonetically different

CLASSIFICATION OF NOUNS

COMMON NOUNS (from Latin: COMMUNIS = shared by several things or individuals possessing some common characteristics)

PROPER NOUNS (Latin: PROPRIUS = one´s own)

- names of individuals = personal names, geographical names,

- names of agroup of individuals

CONCRETE NOUNS - definite objects

ABSTRACT NOUNS - quality, action, state, ideas, concepts

COLLECTIVE NOUNS – groups of people or things

MATERIAL NOUNS

- do not require limiting modifiers

- they usually have no plural forms

MORPHOLOGICAL COMPOSITION OF NOUNS

1)SIMPLE NOUNS: no affixes

2)DERIVATIVE NOUNS:

-prefixes:

un-, mis-, pre-, for-; anti-, ex-, il-, -in-, non-, sub-, super-, vice-,

- suffixes:

-al, -ance, -ence, -ant, -ar, -er, -or, -ion, -iour, -ledge, -ment, -y, -ee;

-age, -ce, -cy, -ry, -ty, -ity, -ness,

-ation, -dom, -ess, -hood, -ian, -ism, -ist, -ship;

-ing forms used as nouns

- diminutives: -let, -ing, -ie, -ock, -ette

Typical endings making nouns for people who come from places:

-ian, -er, -ese, -an, -ish, -ite

Nouns with 2 suffixes: -ishness

3) COMPOUND NOUNS:

= two words joined together referring to asingle object(the meaning

often differs from the meaning of its elements) chairman

N stem + N stem

Adj stem + N stem

Adv stem + N stem

Verb stem + N stem

CN with –ing forms

CN with alinking element:

- avowel/consonant

- apreposition

- aconjunction

DERIVATIONAL COMPOUNDS: narrowmindedness

CONVERSION = lexemes change their word class without adding affixes

V > N; Adj > N; N > V; Adj > V; Adv > V; N > Adj; Adv > Adj; Adv N;

THE GRAMMATICAL CATEGORY OF NUMBER

Countable Ns = sg + pl [-s, -z, -iz]

valley – valleys; country – countries; BUT: the Kennedys;

photo - photos; BUT: hero - heroes; cargo - cargos, cargoes;

VOICING PLURAL

= change of the voiceless consonant –f- into the voiced –v-:

wife - wives; BUT: roof - roofs; dwarf - dwarfs, dwarves;

MUTATED PLURAL

= change of the root vowel: 7 nouns;man - men; Englishmen; BUT: Germans;

-en PLURAL: child; ox; brother – brothers, brethren;

UNINFLECTED PLURAL

= sheep; fish; animals that are hunted: deer; reindeer; BUT: oysters, lobsters;

There are lots of fish in the lake. (There are fishes of many kinds.)

FOREIGN PLURAL

phenomenon; analysis; bacterium; BUT: focus - foci, focuses; larva;

antenna = antennae, antennas; index = indexes, indices;

PLURAL IN COMPOUNDS

bedrooms; postmen;brothers-in-law; passers-by; forget-me-nots;

NOUNS with only plural form followed by averb in plural:

clothes, glasses, goods, pyjamas, scissors, trousers,

NOUNS with –s followed by singular: billiards; mumps; Brussels; news; Statistics is abranch of economics.BUT: Your statistics are unreliable.

NOUNS with the same form of singular and plural = Vis in sg. or pl.:

series; means; This species is unknown. These species of butterfly are rare.

COLLECTIVE NOUNS

NOUNS in sg. followed by Vs in sg.: foliage, machinery;

NOUNS in sg. followed by Vs in pl.: people; cattle; poultry; vermin;

Police are after him. BUT: Police is adepartment of government.

NOUNS that can be both sg. or pl. and used with Vs in sg. or pl.:

crowd, committee, government, jury, board; Family is ...; Families are...;

PLURAL OF NAMES OF NATIONS

Switzerland:sg.aSwiss, pl. many Swiss, nation: the Swiss

The Netherlands/Holland = Dutchman, Dutchmen, nation: the Dutch

Britain; Poland; Sweden; Denmark; Norway;England; Finnland; Germany;

Slovakia; Czech Republic; Poland; Austria; Hungary; Ukraine;

COUNTABILITY

= closely connected with the grammatical category of number

COUNTABLE NOUNS:

-names of living beings or things with adefinite form:student, book, house

- some of abstract Ns: idea, hour, mistake, word, day

-describe separate and separable objects

-sg. and pl.

-articles

-numerals

-How many ...?

-few; afew;

-in exclamations: What anice hat!

UNCOUNTABLE NOUNS:

-something that can be measured but not counted, things without shape or precise limits;

- material, liquids, substances: snow, iron, water, gold,

- abstract qualities and ideas: courage, success, peace, literature

- aunique thing: the moon, the earth (= this world)

- aproper name: Mary, Shakespeare, London

-have only one form

-generally without any article or numerals (only with “the“)

-How much ... ?

-little; alittle;

-in exclamations: What nice weather!

Uncounts in English but counts in Slovak:

gossip, information, hair, homework, news, luggage, soap, thunder

Uncounts in their plural form indicate various kinds, extension or intensity:

fruits, wines, waters, sands, heats, colds

Some NOUNS = uncounts in one meaning and counts in adifferent meaning

U = coal, glass, hair, ice, iron, paper, room,

C= acoal, aglass, ahair, an ice, apaper, aroom,

Partitives: aloaf of bread; slice, packet, piece, bar, tin, drop, item,

THE GRAMMATICAL CATEGORY OF GENDER

OE = grammatical gender; ModE = natural gender:

-male beings = masculine

-female beings = feminine

-inanimate things = neuter

One gender-forming suffix –ess: actor – actress, tiger-tigress, duke-duchess,

Other suffixes: hero - heroine, widow – widower, usher – usherette,

Gender expressed lexically:

- by different words: mother – father, boy – girl, husband - wife, monk – nun,

- by pronouns: wolf – she-wolf, goat – she-goat (Billy goat – nanny goat)

- by words indicating the gender: male reader – female reader,

boyfriend - girlfriend;

Nouns with ageneric term + apair: horse; pig;sheep; monarch;

Common gender: singer, journalist, neighbour,

= pronouns tell us whether the reference is to male or female;

When the reference is affectionate (to apet) = he / she (not: it)

feminine: cat, parrot, fish,...... car, ship, aircraft,

masculine: dog, horse, canary,

Personification:

Masculine gender

- nouns denoting strength, inflexibility, resistance, necessity

- names of winds, rivers, mountains

- summer, autumn, winter, the sun, anger, love, murder, war, death

Feminine gender

- nouns denoting tenderness, feableness, loveliness

- names of countries (ref. to the nation), towns, universities,

- the moon, the earth, the Church, nature, mercy, humility, charity,

faith, hope, modesty, justice, liberty, victory, music, wisdom,

THE GRAMMATICAL CATEGORY OF CASE

OE = 4 cases: N, G, D, Acc.; ModE:

- the common case = uninflected form

- the possessive / genitive case = inflected by:

-´s in sg:agirl´s book; my mother-in-law´s pen;Peter and Paul´s quarrel;

-´ in pl.: girls´ school; BUT: children´s toys;Dickens´/Dickens´s novel;

DEPENDENT GENITIVE

- personal names: Paul´s car;

- personal nouns: my sister´s school;

- personal indefinite pronouns: someone´s passport;

- names of animals: dog´s life;

- collective nouns: government´s decision;

- geographical names (not in geogr. meaning): Slovakia´s export;

BUT: the longest river of Slovakia; cf. Europe´s future – European future;

- institutional names: the school´s history;

- expressions of time, space, weight, distance: journey´s end;two week´s work;

BUT: the two-week plan

- names of seasons/months/days: Sunday´s newspaper;

BUT aSunday newspaper

- with words: sun, moon, earth, world: the earth´s surface;

- with words: ship, boat, vessel: ship´s cargo;

- with personification (in poetry): wind´s whistle;

- fixed expressions: to be at death´s door; by ahair´s breadth;for heaven´s sake

The possession of things = the OF-GENITIVE/OF-constructionrefers to:

- things when we cannot form acompound: the shade of atree;

- parts of things: the roof of the house;

- abstract nouns: the cost of living;

- partitives: aslice of bread;

- geographical notions: the city of Dublin;

- also: the month of November;the title of professor;

THE ABSOLUTE / ELYPTICAL GENITIVE= without afollowing noun:

-when it is clear what / who we are talking about:

My car is next to Peter´s.

-when referring to work-places, shops, banks, houses:

at abutcher´s (shop); my mother´s (house); Barclay´s (bank);

THE DOUBLE GENITIVE= when anoun is determined by:

- articles: afriend of my father´s;

- numerals: two sons of my uncle´s;

- some: She is having lunch with some colleagues of hers. = some of her coll-s;

- demonstrative pronouns: This small flat of ours.