As we know, nouns are of different kinds:
- Proper nouns, for example, Ganesh, Skyview Towers, Nasik, Sunday, Deepawali.
- Common nouns, for example, parrot, doctor, hospital. Common nouns are countable, such as: bag, orange, shirt; and uncountable, such as rice and oil. Some countable nouns are concrete and represent people, things or activities that can be seen, touched or heard, for example rose, table. Other countable nouns are abstract and represent states, feeling or qualities, for example hope, ambition. Similarly, some uncountable nouns are concrete, for example, clothing, bread, while others are abstract, for example peace, pain.
- Collective nouns: for example, a team of players, a bouquet of flowers.
- Partitives, for example, loaf in 'a loaf/two loaves of bread', piece in 'a piece/some pieces of furniture/news/information'. The partitive noun 'pair' is used in front of some nouns that have only a plural form, for example a pair/many pairs of jeans/scissors.
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