noun 문장
EN[naʊn] [næːn] [-aʊn]US-Inland North
뜻명사 위명사 (품사)
- 문장 noun
- usage note: Usually the noun is part of a noun phrase explicitly denoting the particular speciality, such as a "compiler jock" or a "systems jock". Usage of the word alone with this meaning is rare.
- A noun is the usual modificand of an adjective.
- For example, in the compound noun "chicken soup", the noun adjunct "chicken" modifies the noun "soup".
- Each one of his parkings of securities was a separate count on the indictment. ( as gerundial noun )
- That’s because the noun, by virtue of its use as a hyphenated compound adjective in middle-age spread, creates nail-nibbling self-doubt amid visions of muffin-top midriffs and the realization that paunchiness precludes raunchiness.
- As here the possessive pronoun 'our' has inclusive reference in that it a priori includes both the editor and reader, its presense amounts to a kind of pronominal bonding between writer and reader.
- Meus and tuus are called adjectival pronouns – or alternatively possessive adjectives.
- the grammatical uncountability of a noun
- His repeated wagerings of his allowances led him to ruin. ( gerundial noun )
- A noun phrase is overspecified when it is used in a context where a pronoun would have been unambiguous.
- 문장 nouns
- Many languages do not distinguish countable nouns from uncountable nouns.
- nouns used pronominally
- Some nouns can be used both countably and uncountably.
- Adjectival nouns are simply identical in form to adjectives of a particular gender and decline accordingly.
- The capitalisation of all nouns is a distinctive feature of German.
- In Latin, 'amicus' belongs to the second declension. Most second-declension nouns end in '-i' in the genitive singular and '-um' in the accusative singular.
- Most first declension nouns are feminine, but a few like agricola and nauta are masculine.
- the genderedness of nouns in French
- Adjectives and nouns should agree in gender, number, and case.
Examples of noun in a Sentence
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