NOUN
NOUN
NOUN
Kinds of Noun:
1. Proper Noun: a proper noun is the name of some particular person or place.
Ex- Ram , Shyam, Delhi.
2. Common Noun: A Common noun is a name given in common to every person or thing of the
same kind or class.
Ex- boy, girl, teacher etc.
4.Abstract Noun: a noun denoting an idea, quality, or state rather than a concrete object.
Ex- strength, innocence, fear, judgment. Etc.
5. Material Noun: Material noun is the name given to the material, substance or things made
up of The alloy.
Ex- cotton, gold, silver etc.
NOUN: Gender
1. Masculine Gender
A noun that denotes male animal is said to be of the Masculine Gender.
Ex- Man, boy, Tiger, Sun etc.
2. Feminine Gender: A noun that denotes a female animal is said to be of the Feminine
Gender.
Ex- woman, girl, nature, lioness etc.
3. Common Gender: A noun that denotes either a male or a female is said to be of the
common gender.
Ex- Parent, child, student, cousin etc.
4.Neuter Gender: A noun that denotes a thing without life , neither male nor female , is said to
be of the Neuter gender.
Ex- Book, Pen, room etc.
NOUN: NUMBER
1. Singular Noun:
A noun that denotes one person or thing , is said to be in the Singular Number.
Ex- pen, cow, boy etc.
2. Plural Noun: A noun that denotes more than one person or thing , is said to be in the plural
Number.
Ex- Pens, Boys, Cows etc
NOUN: CASES
The case of a noun tells us about the position of that noun or pronoun in a sentence.
In English, there are five cases.
Nominative case: a noun is said to be in the nominative case if it is the subject of a verb.
Ex- Ram is an intelligent boy.
Objective case: Nouns or Pronouns are said to be in objective case if they are the direct object
of verbs or the objects of the preposition.
Dative case: A noun is said to be in Dative case if it is the indirect object of the verb.
Rohan brought me a flower. (‘Me’ is in dative case)
Vocative case : A noun or pronoun is said to be in vocative case if it is used to call ( or to get
attention of a person or persons)
Ex- Mr. Mallya , people are waiting for you in the hall. (Mr. Mallya is in vocative case)
NOUN in Apposition
when one noun follows another to describe it, the noun which follows is said to be in apposition
to the noun which comes before it.
Ex- Ram , our captain, made fifty runs.
Kabir , the great reformer, was a weaver.
☞2. Some nouns are singular in meaning, but they are used as plural nouns and
always take a plural verb.
Cattle, gentry, vermin, peasantry, artillery, people, clergy, company, police.
(A) The cattle is grazing in the ground. (correct use- are)
(B) Police has controlled the situation. ( correct use- have)
☞3. Some nouns are always used in a plural form and always take a plural verb.
Trousers, scissors, spectacles, stockings, shorts, measles, goods, alms, premises,
thanks, tidings, annals, chattels, etc.
(A) Where is my trousers? (correct use- are)
(B) Where are my trousers? Correct
(A) Spectacles is a costly item. ( correct use- are)
☞4. There are some nouns that indicate length, measure, money, weight or number.
When they are preceded by a numeral, they remain unchanged in form.
Foot, meter, pair, score, dozen, head, year, hundred, thousand, million.
(A) It is a five – years degree course. (correct use- year)
(A) I have seven dozens of shoes. (correct use- dozen)
☞5. Collective nouns such as jury, public, team, committee, government, audience,
orchestra, company, etc. are used both as singular and Plural. It depends on the
usage.
(A) The jury was divided in their opinion. (correct use- were)
(A) The team have not arrived yet. (correct use- has)
☞6. Some nouns have one meaning in the singular and another in the plural:
a.Advice = counsel,
advices = information
b.Air = atmosphere,
airs = proud
c. Authority = command,
authorities = persons in power
d. Good = wise ,
goods = property
e. Iron = metal,
irons = fetters, chains
f. Force = strength
forces = army
g. Content = satisfaction,
contents = things contained
h. Respect = regards,
respects = compliments
i. Work = job
works = compositions, factories,.
☞7. People are often confused or they commit mistakes in the use of certain nouns.
(A) Lecturership is wrong: lectureship is correct.
(B) Freeship is wrong; free – studentship is correct.
(C) Boarding is wrong; boarding house is correct.
(D) Family members is wrong; members of the family is correct.
(E) English teacher is wrong; the teacher of English is correct.
(F) Cousin – brother or sister is wrong; only cousin is correct.
(G) Wages means punishments when used in the singular.
Ex- The wages of sin is death.
(H) It also means charges for the labour when used in the plural sense.
Ex- The wages of daily workers have been raised.
☞8. A pronoun must agree with its antecedent in person, number and gender.
Ex- Every student must bring his luggage.
All students must do their home work.
Each of the boys must carry his own bag.
☞9. While using ‘everybody’ ‘everyone’, ‘anybody’, and ‘each’ the pronoun of the
masculine or the feminine gender is used according to the context.
I shall be happy to help each of the boys in this practice.
But when the sex is not mentioned, we use the pronoun of the masculine gender.
Anyone can qualify this exam if he tries.
Each of the six boys in the class has finished their tasks. (Incorrect)
Each of the six boys in the class has finished his task. (Correct)
☞11. Enjoy, apply, resign, acquit, drive, exert, avail, pride, absent, etc., when used as
transitive verbs, always take a reflexive pronoun after them. When ‘self’ is added to
‘my’, ‘your’, ‘him’, ‘her’, and ‘it’, and ‘selves’ to our and them – they are known as
reflexive pronouns.
He absented from the meeting.
He absented himself from the meeting.
☞12. ‘Who’ denotes the subject and ‘whom’ is used for the object?
who : It’s the subject of a verb—e.g., Who gave you that book?
It’s a predicate nominative (a noun in the predicate that renames or refers to the sentence’s
subject)—e.g.,This is who I am.
Whom is an objective pronoun, which is a pronoun that receives the action of a verb.
It also has two main uses:
It is the object of a verb—e.g., Whom should I call?
It is the object of a preposition—e.g., From whom did you get this information?
☞13. When two or more singular nouns are connected by ‘either or’; ‘neither nor’, ;
and ‘or’, the pronoun used is singular.
Either Rohan or Sohan will give their bike. (Incorrect)
Either Rohan or sohan will give his book. (Correct)
☞14. When a singular and a plural noun are joined by ‘or’, ‘nor’, the pronoun must be
plural.
Either the student or his teachers failed in his duty. (Incorrect)
Either the student or his teachers failed in their duty. (Correct)
☞15. ‘Whose’ is used for living persons and ‘which’ for lifeless objects.
Which novel did you select?
Whose photograph is lying there?
☞16. ‘Each other’ is used when there are two subjects or objects and ‘one another’
when there are more than two.
Ram and Sita loved each other.
Those five students, who are sitting there, love one another.
☞17. When a pronoun stands for a collective noun, it must be in the singular number
and in the neuter gender if the collective noun is viewed as a whole.but if it gives an
idea of different entities , plural pronoun is used.
The jury gave ‘its’ verdict.
Here the ‘jury’ gives the idea of one whole.
If the collective noun conveys the idea of separate individuals comprising the whole, the
pronoun standing for it must be plural.
The jury were divided in their opinions.
in this sentence , the ‘jury’ gives the idea of several individuals.
☞18. If pronouns of different persons are to be used together in a sentence, the serial
order of persons should be as follows;
second person(2) + third (3)+ first person(1) in normal sentences. But when mistake or fault
is expressed in the sentence, the order should be; first person(1) + second person(2) + third
person(3). RULE-231
You, he and I have finished the work. (Normal idea)
I, you and he are to blame. ( here Confession of guilt is expressed , it’s a negative idea, hence
order is 123)
☞20. The use of ‘few’, ‘a few’’ and ‘the few’ should be used with care. They denote
‘number’.
‘Few’ means ‘not many’, ‘almost nothing’. A ‘few’ is positive and means ‘some at least’. ‘The
few’ means ‘whatever there is’.
A few men are free from fault. (Incorrect)
Few men are free from fault. (Correct)
(Here the sense is negative and thus ‘a few’ is wrong.)
☞24. Normally ‘than’ is used in the comparative degree, but with words like superior,
inferior, senior, junior, prior, anterior, posterior and prefer ‘to’ is used.
Sara is junior than Neeta.( Incorrect)
Sara is junior to Neeta. (Correct)
I prefer reading than walking. (Incorrect)
I prefer reading to walking. (Correct)
☞25. when a comparison is made by using a comparative followed by ‘than’, the word
‘other’ must exclude the thing compared form the class of things with which it is
compared.
He is better than any man. (Incorrect)
He is better than any other man. (Correct)
‘Any man’ includes the man himself and thus the sentences will be awkward.
☞26. In some cases, the comparison is subtle and must be given proper attention.
Ex- The climate of Delhi is better than Mumbai. (Incorrect)
Here the comparison should be between the climate of Delhi and the climate of Mumbai.
The climate of Delhi is better than the climate of Mumbai. (Correct)
Or
The climate of Ranchi is better than that of Gaya. (Correct)
(Here, ‘That of’ means ‘the climate of’)
If the traits are in plural, it will be ‘those of’.
The products of Reliance are better than those of Suzuki.
The scenery of Kashmir is better than Shimla. (Incorrect)
The scenery of Kashmir is better than that of shimla. (Correct)
☞29. When ‘as well as’, ‘along with’, together with’, ‘no less than’, ‘in addition to’ and
‘not’ and ‘with’ join two subjects, the verb will be used according to the first subject.
Ram, as well as his five friends, are going.( Incorrect)
Ram, as well as his five friends, is going. (Correct)
The teacher, along with the students, were dancing.( Incorrect)
The teacher, along with the students, was going. Correct
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PRONOUNS
Personal Pronoun
“A pronoun is a word used instead of a Noun”.
(I, we, you, he, she, it, they) are called personal pronouns because they stand for the
three persons.
(i) The person speaking
(ii) The person spoken to, and
(iii) The person spoken of.
Possessive case
(Genitive)
Nominative case Objective case
(Subjective) (Accusative)
I me my, mine,
First Person we us our, ours
you
Gender
Example: He went to the market.
He is used for male gender.
Other examples – (his, him, he etc.)
Number
Singular Pronoun – where the pronoun is only referring to one specific Noun.
Example: That book belongs to me.
REFLEXIVE PRONOUN
“They are object pronouns that we use when the subject and the object are the same Noun.”
Example: I told myself not to bet all my money on one horse.
Example: The robber hurt himself chasing me through the alley.
“Reflexive pronouns are those which are used to indicate a noun which has been used in an
earlier part of the same sentence.
(myself, themselves, yourself, ourselves, herself, himself, itself.)
EMPHATIC/INTENSIVE PRONOUN
DEMONSTRATIVE PRONOUN
“Demonstrative pronouns are used to show or identify one or a number of nouns that may be far
or near in distance or time.
I like this.
(This – demonstrative pronoun)
INDEFINITE PRONOUN
“These pronouns do stand for some person or thing, but we don’t know for exactly whom.”
When we say, “somebody stole my watch.”
(We don’t know to whom the word ‘somebody’ refers to. The word ‘somebody’ is an indefinite
pronoun.
DISTRIBUTIVE PRONOUN
“These Pronouns refer to individual elements in a group or a pair, one individual at a time.”
Each, either, neither are called distributive pronouns because they refer to persons or things,
one at a time.
Each →used to denote every one of a number of persons or things taken singly.
Either and Neither should be used only in speaking of two persons or things.
When more than two are spoken of (Any, No one, and none) should be used.
RECIPROCAL PRONOUN
RELATIVE PRONOUN
Example: The driver who Ran the stop sign was careless.
Who and whom are used for people and whose is used to show possession.
Example: she will choose the color which looks good on everyone
There is a car in the parking lot that someone has painted a bright pink.
Is there anyone here whose mobile phone has a signal?
I met Hari who had just returned.
I have found the pen which I lost.
There is the book That you lent me.
INTERROGATIVE
Who, whom, which and what are interrogative pronouns as they are used to ask questions about
a person or object that we do not know about.
Compounds of these words are made by attaching (–ever) to the words to strengthen the
emphasis on the word.
Shortcut Rule 2 : A Pronoun in the nominative form should be compared with the same form of the
pronoun.
Shortcut Rule 3 : A Pronoun in the objective case is used after "Let / Between / Any Preposition"
Shortcut Rule 4 : When a pronoun stands for a collective noun, it should be used in the singular form.
Shortcut Rule 5 : When two singular nouns are joined by "and", refer to the same person, the pronoun
used in their place should be singular in form.
Shortcut Rule 6 : A singular pronoun should be used when two singular nouns are joined by either
or / neither nor
Shortcut Rule 7 : A pronoun in the plural form should be used when two nouns of different members
are joined by "or" or "nor".
Shortcut Rule 8 : The distributive pronouns "Either / Neither / None / Any / No one" are used with
singular verbs.
Either / Neither ........................Used for two Person / Things
None / No one / Any ................ Used for more than two person / things.
Any ............................Used for more than two persons / things. Have a look at some
Shortcut Rule 9 : The Reciprocal pronouns "Each other / One another"
Each other - For two persons
One another - For more than two persons.
The two sister hate each other.
The five brother love one another.
Shortcut Rule 10 : The indefinite pronoun "One" should be used as "One's" for its possessive case.
Shortcut Rule 11 : The verbs such as "Hurt / Cheat / Prostrate / Introduce / Present / Absent /
Satisfy / Prepare / Enjoy / Avail of" are followed by either "an" object or "a" reflexive pronoun. (Myself
/ Ourselves / Yourself / Yourselves) (Himself / Herself / Itself / Themselves)
Shortcut Rule 13 : The word "Who" as a relative pronoun is used in the nominative case, takes a verb.
The word "Whom" as a relative pronoun is used in the objective case (takes no verb)
Shortcut Rule 14 : Agreement of the verb with its antecedent in number and person
Shortcut Rule 15 : If a pronoun is to be placed after "to be", the pronoun in the subjective case is
used.