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Noun Phrases I: noun types Professor Sabine Mendes Moura [email protected]

Noun Phrases I: noun types Professor Sabine Mendes Moura [email protected]

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Noun Phrases I: noun types

Professor Sabine Mendes [email protected]

Types of Nouns

• Nouns as a word class…various sub-groups– Based on meaning:

concrete vs. abstract; common vs. proper; animate vs inanimate; collective

– Based on structure: count vs. noncount

Concrete vs abstract

Is advertisement an abstract noun?

Concrete vs abstract

An abstract noun is one which cannot be perceived by any of the senses.

“There is an advertisement (ad) for a concert on that notice-board”

“The priest’s generosity was an advertisement for his faith”

Concrete vs abstract

What about pollution?

Concrete vs abstract

An abstract noun is one which cannot be perceived by any of the senses.

“The haze of pollution that hung over the city made many people feel ill”

“ The moral pollution of the mayor’s corrupt activities affected the reputation of the city council for years”

Rock-and-roll; rock-‘n’-roll

Concrete vs abstract

Is God an abstract noun?

Proper and common nouns

• Zeus• He is lord of the sky, the rain god.

Proper and common nouns

Classifying...

The Olympian Gods and GoddessesIn Greek mythology, twelve gods and goddesses

ruled the universe from atop Greece's Mount Olympus. These Olympians had come to power after their leader, Zeus, overthrew his father, Kronos, leader of the Titans. All the Olympians are related to one another. The Romans adopted most of these Greek gods and goddesses, but with new names.

HEARING IMPAIRED? HEARING HANDICAPPED? HARD OF HEARING? DEAF?

WHAT'S IN A LABEL? EVERYTHING!

CCSD uses "Deaf" with a capital "D" to refer to any Deaf person. This is not to place a particular identity on particular individuals. It reflects that ASL and Deaf culture are the birthright of every Deaf individual by virtue of their having been born Deaf or become Deaf in childhood, whether or not they have been exposed to it. This is in keeping with how we refer to individuals from other cultural minority groups such as Black or Jewish (Pizzacalla and Cripps, 1997).To avoid mis-labelling, simply call us "Deaf". Please remove "hearing-impaired", "hearing handicapped" and "hard of hearing" from your list. The Canadian Cultural Society of the Deaf feels that Deaf people do not need any more labels. "Deaf" is how we refer to ourselves. Why label us anything else?

http://www.deafculturecentre.ca/

Count & Noncount

• Count Nouns– Singular• book, child

– Plural• books, children

• Noncount Nouns– Not singular & not plural– “this kinda stuff”• Rice• Music• Knowledge• Homework• News

Culture & Counting• “Countability is partly a matter of how we view the world,

rather than how the world really is.” (p. 57)• Words can be countable in other languages and not in English.

– In Japanese, the word for “homework” is countable: Children turn in their homeworks.

• Words can be countable in other version of English and not in U.S. English.– In Indian English, the word chalk is countable. Teachers can have 2

chalks.

Lists of Noncount Nouns• Many words can be either count or noncount depending on their

meaning:– I like coffee. (noncount)– I bought a coffee at Starbucks. (singular count noun)

• However, most words have typical uses…used more as noncount than count or used more as count than noncount

• Tea: typically used as noncount: “I like tea.”– In Bank of English’s 450,000,000 words– Tea is used 26,332 times!– A tea = 922 times– Teas = 1115 times

Collective nouns

“Words like herd, flock and shoal are in common usage as collective nouns for mammals, birds and fish, but there are collective nouns that are far more eloquent and poetic. And this happens because we let it”.

http://www.sharediaries.com/articles/collective-nouns

A skulk of foxes.A murder of crows.A sneak of weasels.A caravan of camels.A seething of eels.

Fairclough (2001)

Stephen King’s “On Writing”