Types of Nouns
Countable Nouns
These are nouns that can be counted and have singular and plural forms. In their singular form, they can be preceded by "a" / "an". Examples include: cat, women, country, drinks.
Uncountable Nouns
These nouns cannot be counted and don't usually have a plural form. Examples include: flour, earth, wood, rain.
Possessive Noun
These nouns demonstrate ownership over something else and they typically include an apostrophe. Examples include: Tony's car, the dog's bone, my mother's recipe.
Plural Nouns
These nouns do not have a singular form but we use them to talk about multiples of a thing. We often use them with "some" or "a pair of". Examples include: trousers, scissors, outskirts.
Proper Noun
These nouns refer to one person, place, thing or idea in particular. They start with a capital letter and can be names of people, places, buildings, books, movies, months, days and organisations. Examples include: James Bond, February, Samsung, Monday, Big Ben, The Godfather.
Concrete Noun
This is a noun that can be identified through the five senses - sight, smell, sound, taste and touch. Examples include: music, pie, tornado, flower, dog, milk, team. If you cannot see, smell, hear, taste, or touch something it is not this type of noun.
Collective Noun
This noun refers to a group of people, animals or things and is used in a singular form. Examples include: a flock, a herd, a bunch, a set.
Abstract Noun
nouns that you cannot see, hear, taste, touch or smell. They refer to emotions, ideas, concepts, beliefs or a state of being. Examples include: love, hate, acceptance, safety, evil, happiness, education, patience.