The word english is a noun

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Is English an adjective?

The word English may be used as a noun or as an adjective.


Is tiger is a naming noun?

In English there is no noun type called a ‘naming noun’.
A noun is a word for a person, a place, or a thing.
The noun ‘tiger’ is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word
for a type of feline; a word for a thing.


Is checing things out a noun?

No, «checing» is not even an English word. If you meant
«Checking» then this too is not a noun, it is a verb (an activity
word).


Is gaunts feminine or masculine?

There is no word in English spelled ‘gaunts’.The nearest English word is gaunt, an adjective, a word that describes a noun. In English there are no masculine or feminine forms.


What is noun patient?

The noun ‘patient’ is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a person (or an animal).The word ‘patient’ is also an adjective, a word used to describe a noun.The noun form of the adjective ‘patient’ is patientness.A related noun form is patience.

English and British are two words that are often used when discussing the inhabitants of the United Kingdom. Some people think that they are synonyms while some feel that it is offending to use them interchangeably. Therefore, we will be looking at the difference between English and British in this article. The main difference between English and British is that English is used in relation to people or things from England while British is used in relation to people or things from the Great Britain.

First, we need to know the difference between Great Britain and England, before analyzing the differences between English and British.

Great Britain vs England

Great Britain: Great Britain is England, Wales, and Scotland considered as a unit. Some people also use  the United Kingdom as a synonym of Great Britain, but this is not strictly correct as the Great Britain is only a part of United Kingdom. Great Britain, north-eastern part of the island of Ireland and many smaller islands make up the United Kingdom.

England: England is a country that belongs to Great Britain.Difference Between English and British _ Great Britain map

What is English

The word ‘English’ is used as a noun and an adjective. As an adjective, English is used in relating to England, its people, or language.  As a noun, it can refer to the language or people.

English used as a Noun

When referring to the people of England

“Beating the English in England is not very easy.”

“She felt that the English were too haughty.”

When referring the language of England, now widely used throughout the world.

“English was not her native language.”

“There are five vowel letters in English, unlike in French.”

English used as an Adjective

“She served us coffee and English muffins.”

“The English army was one of the most powerful armies in the world.”

difference beetween english and british

The flag of England

What is British

The term, ‘British’ originating from Old English Brettisc (‘relating to the ancient Britons’) refers to the people or language of Great Britain or the United Kingdom. As a noun, (the British) it refers to the people of Great Britain. 

“The British gained total control of Sri Lanka in 1815.” – Noun

“Millicent Garrett Fawcett is a British writer and political worker who tirelessly worked for the women’s suffrage”.- Adjective

“J.K. Rowling is one of the most successful, contemporary British authors.” – Adjective

British English refers to the English language as written and spoken in the United Kingdom.

Main Difference British vs English

The Union Flag is one of the most potent symbols of Britishness

Difference Between British and English

Usage

English: As explained above, ‘English’ is used to describe people, things that are from English

British: The word ‘British’ is used in relation to Great Britain.

Keep in mind that you should call someone English if you know that they are from Englnd. If you call them English and if they are from Scotland or Wales, they might find it insulting.

Image courtesy:

“Great Britain template”. (CC BY-SA 3.0) via Wikimedia Commons    

“Flag of England”. (Public Domain) via Wikipedia     

“Flag of the United Kingdom”. ( Public Domain) via Wikipedia                                             

​You May Also Like These

  • #1

I thought ‘English’ the language was a proper noun.
But in this Oxford Dictionary, it is not marked as one but simply a mass noun.

1 [mass noun] The language of England, widely used in many varieties throughout the world.

In comparison, ‘England’ is marked in the same dictionary as a proper noun:

PROPER NOUN

A country forming the largest and southernmost part of Great Britain and of the United Kingdom, and containing the capital, London; population 51,446,000 (est. 2008)

Is ‘English’ the language not a proper noun but a common noun?

  • natkretep


    • #2

    Certainly a proper noun. You only need to see how the word is capitalised. The treatment is, as you noticed, inconsistent, and it might be that the dictionary considers English to be a shortened version of the English language.

    entangledbank


    • #3

    There are some language names that aren’t also (primarily) adjectives to confuse matters, and surely these — Swahili, Esperanto, Rumansh — are proper names, names of specific things.

    sdgraham


    • #4

    Is ‘English’ the language not a proper noun but a common noun?

    If it were not considered a proper noun, they would not have capitalized it. ;)

    PaulQ


    • #5

    I see English as an absolute adjective and, as it is geographical, it therefore it is capitalised.
    A French wine, a German car, a Chilean apricot; he speaks French; he is German, The western Andes are Chilean.

    ewie


    • #6

    Is it an adjective in English is a language spoken in England too, Mr Q?

    If so, does that mean that carrots is an adjective in Carrots are a vegetable grown in England?

    PaulQ


    • #7

    I don’t think that «English» is ever much more than a shortened form of «English <noun>»
    Carrots are plural and a shortened form of parsnip.

    ewie


    • #8

    I’ll leave you to your theory, Mr Q.

    Andygc


    • #9

    I’ll leave you to your theory, Mr Q.

    It seems that Bede used it as a noun referring to the language and separately as a noun referring to the people, in its early Old English form, so insisting it’s an adjective is, perhaps, an example of ploughing a lonely furrow.

    ewie


    • #10

    I’m still trying to get my head round Mr Q’s theory. Surely if a thing acts and behaves exactly like a noun … well, it’s a noun.

    The English spoken on telly these days is bleedin awful.
    It’s written in an English that I don’t recognize.
    His French was pretty good but his English was terrible.
    They spoke somewhat old-fashioned English.*

    Would you call this English an adverb, Mr Q?

    Loob


    • #11

    It’s a noun for me.

    But whether you call it a proper noun depends on your definition of proper noun. I’ve always found the term a bit woolly:(.
    …..

    Edit

    . I’ve just been looking back at this earlier thread of yours Is ‘Yankee’ a proper noun or a common noun?, which contains some possibly-relevant discussion.
    (I see I was more trenchant about the terms proper noun/common noun five years ago….)

    Last edited: Sep 9, 2019

    Andygc


    • #12

    Isn’t a proper noun just a noun that has, by convention, an initial capital? :D:rolleyes:

    sdgraham


    • #13

    Isn’t a proper noun just a noun that has, by convention, an initial capital? :D:rolleyes:

    :thumbsup: :thumbsup:

    Loob


    • #14

    Isn’t a proper noun just a noun that has, by convention, an initial capital? :D:rolleyes:

    Sort of.

    But then you get into issues like «Is University in the University of Liverpool a proper noun?» And «Is French in I know lots of French people a ‘proper adjective’?»

    All a bit … pointless, in my view. Much easier to talk about «words which are conventionally given initial capitals»;)

    Hermione Golightly


    • #15

    … pointless, in my view.

    Mine too.
    »How many angels can dance on a needle point?», purely academic sort of thing. Why not ask the dictionary people?

    natkretep


    • #16

    Sort of.

    But then you get into issues like «Is University in the University of Liverpool a proper noun?» And «Is French in I know lots of French people a ‘proper adjective’?»

    All a bit … pointless, in my view. Much easier to talk about «words which are conventionally given initial capitals»;)

    Sort of. We use initial capitals for proper names too. We can say the University of Liverpool is a proper name rather than a proper noun. This proper name contains the proper noun Liverpool. And you can have a proper name (Open University) with no proper noun.

    Linguists and onomasticians say that proper nouns ordinarily have unique reference, don’t attract the use of articles and don’t pluralise, and this distinguishes them from common nouns.

    ewie


    • #17

    Is it an adjective in English is a language spoken in England too, Mr Q?

    If so, does that mean that carrots is an adjective in Carrots are a vegetable grown in England?

    They spoke somewhat old-fashioned English.*

    Would you call this English an adverb, Mr Q?

    Some non-Boris-Johnson-like answers to these questions would be appreciated :)

    This page is about the language called English. Other meanings of English include:

    • the English (plural noun): the people of England
    • English (adjective): relating to England or its people (or the language)

    English is a language—originally the language of the people of England. Today, English is the main language of the United Kingdom, Ireland, the United States of America, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and more than fifty other countries. (Interestingly, until as recently as 2017 English was NOT the official language of the USA, although it had long been the official language of several US states.)

    Worldwide, there are over 400 million native speakers of English, and over one billion more people speak it as a second language. English is probably the third language in terms of number of native speakers (after Mandarin and Spanish); and probably the most widely spoken language on the planet taking into account native and non-native speakers.

    Consequently English is sometimes described as a «world language» or a «global lingua franca». It is the world’s most widely-used language in international business and telecommunications, newspaper and book publishing, scientific publishing, mass entertainment and diplomacy.

    English uses a writing system based on the classical Latin or Roman alphabet—the English alphabet with twenty-six letters that have:

    • small or lowercase forms
      a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z
    • and capital or uppercase forms
      A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

    English belongs to the West Germanic group of Indo-European languages. Much of its vocabulary is Germanic, heavily influenced by Latin and French, though it has also borrowed many loanwords from other languages all over the world, for example:

    • mattress, algebra (from Arabic)
    • tulip, jackal (from Turkish)
    • bazaar, caravan (from Persian)
    • shampoo, dungarees (from Hindi)
    • fjord, ski (from Norwegian)
    • kayak, igloo (from Eskimo)
    • mosquito, siesta (from Spanish)
    • soprano, casino (from Italian)

    lingua franca (noun): a language that is used as a common language between people who speak different languages

    borrow (verb): take a word from another language and use it as your own language

    loanword (noun): a word that has been borrowed from another language

    Contributor: Josef Essberger

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    From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    English
    Pronunciation [1]
    Region British Isles (originally)
    Worldwide

    Native speakers

    360–400 million[2]
    L2 speakers: 400 million;
    as a foreign language: 600–700 million

    Language family

    Indo-European

    • Germanic

      • West Germanic
        • Anglo-Frisian
          • Anglic
            • English

    Early forms

    Old English

    • Middle English
      • Early Modern English

    Writing system

    • Latin script (English alphabet)
    • English Braille, Unified English Braille

    Signed forms

    Manually coded English
    (multiple systems)
    Official status

    Official language in

    • 67 countries
    • 27 non-sovereign entities

    Various organisations

      • United Nations
      • European Union
      • Commonwealth of Nations
      • Council of Europe
      • ICC
      • IMF
      • IOC
      • ISO
      • NATO
      • WTO
      • NAFTA
      • OAS
      • OECD
      • OIC
      • OPEC
      • GUAM Organization for Democracy and Economic Development
      • PIF
      • UKUSA Agreement
      • ASEAN
      • ASEAN Economic Community
      • SAARC
      • CARICOM
      • Turkic Council
      • ECO
    Language codes
    ISO 639-1 en
    ISO 639-2 eng
    ISO 639-3 eng
    Glottolog stan1293
    Linguasphere 52-ABA
    English language distribution.svg

      Countries of the world where English is a majority native language

      Countries where English is official but not a majority native language

    This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.

    English[3] is a language that started in Anglo-Saxon England. It is originally from Anglo-Frisian and Old Saxon dialects. English is now used as a global language. There are about 375 million native speakers (people who use it as their first language) in the world.[4]

    Frisian is the language closest to English. The vocabulary of English was influenced by other Germanic languages in the early Middle Ages and later by Romance languages, especially French.

    English is the only official language or one of the official languages of nearly 60 countries. It is also the main language of more countries in the world than any other. It is the primary language in the United Kingdom, Ireland, the United States, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand. It is one of the official languages in Singapore, India, Hong Kong, and South Africa. It is widely spoken in parts of the Caribbean, Africa, and South Asia.

    In 2005, it was estimated that there were over 2 billion speakers of English.[5] English is the first foreign language for most learners who have another main language. It is an official language of the United Nations, European Union, and many other international organizations. It is the most widely-spoken Germanic language, with at least 70% of Germanic speakers speaking English. About 220 million others use it as their second language. It is, together with German, the most important language of science and technology. It is often used in work and travel and trade, and there are at least a billion people who are learning it. That makes English the largest language by number of speakers.

    English has changed and developed over time, like all other languages.[6] The most obvious changes are the many words taken from Latin and Old French, which then came to Old English and then Modern English, which is used today.

    English grammar has also become very different from other Germanic languages, but it stayed different from Romance languages. Because nearly 60% of the vocabulary comes from Latin, English is sometimes called the Germanic language that is the most Latin, and it is often mistaken for being a Romance language.[7]

    History[change | change source]

    Germanic tribes (Saxons, Angles, and Jutes) came to Britain from around 449 AD. They made their home in the south and east of the island, pushing out the Celtic Britons who were there before them, or making them speak the English language instead of the old Celtic languages. Some people still speak Celtic languages today, in Wales (Welsh) and elsewhere. Gaelic is the Scottish Celtic language, still spoken by some in the Scottish Highlands and Islands. «Scots» is a dialect of English, taken from the English spoken in Northumbria. Irish Gaelic is spoken by very few people today.

    The Germanic dialects of the different tribes became what is now called Old English. The word «English» comes from the name of the Angles: Englas. Old English did not sound or look much like the English spoken today. If English speakers today were to hear or read a passage in Old English, they would understand just a few words.

    The closest language to English that is still used today is Frisian, spoken by about 500,000 people living in the Netherlands, Germany and Denmark. It is much like English, and many words are the same. The two languages were even closer before Old English changed to Middle English. Today, speakers of the two languages would not be able to understand each other. Dutch is spoken by over 20 million people, and is more distant from English. German is even bigger, and even more distant. All these languages belong to the same West Germanic family as English.

    Many other people came to England later at different times, speaking different languages, and these languages added more words to make today’s English. For example, around 800 AD, many Danish and Norse pirates, also called Vikings, came to the country, established Danelaw. So, English got many Norse loanwords. Their languages were Germanic languages, like Old English, but are a little different. They are called the North Germanic languages.

    When William the Conqueror took over England in 1066 AD, he brought his nobles, who spoke Norman, a language closely related to French. English changed a lot because it was mostly being spoken instead of written for about 300 years. All official documents were written in Norman French. English borrowed many words from Norman at that time, and also began to drop the old word endings. English of this time is called Middle English. Geoffrey Chaucer is a well known writer of Middle English. After more sound changes, Middle English became Modern English.

    English continued to take new words from other languages, for example mainly from French (around 30% to 40% of its words), but also Chinese, Hindi, Urdu, Japanese, Dutch, Spanish, Portuguese, etc. Because scientists from different countries needed to talk to one another, they chose names for scientific things in the languages they all knew: Greek and Latin. Those words came to English also, for example, photography («photo-» means «light» and «-graph» means «picture» or «writing», in Greek.[8] A photograph is a picture made using light), or telephone. So, English is made of Old English, Danish, Norse, and French, and has been changed by Latin, Greek, Chinese, Hindi, Japanese, Dutch and Spanish, along with some words from other languages.

    English grammar has also changed, becoming simpler and less Germanic. The classic example is the loss of case in grammar. Grammatical case shows the role of a noun, adjective or pronoun in a sentence. In Latin (and other Indo-European languages), this is done by adding suffixes, but English usually does not. The style of English is that meaning is made clear more by context and syntax.

    The history of the British Empire has added to the spread of English. English is an important language in many places today. In Australia, Canada, India, Pakistan, South Africa, and the United States, among others (like those in the Commonwealth of Nations), English is the main language. Because the United Kingdom (the country where England is) and the United States have historically been powerful in commerce and government, many people find it helpful to learn English to communicate in science, business, and diplomacy. This is called learning English as an additional language, English as a second language (ESL) or English as a foreign language (EFL).

    English literature has many famous stories and plays. William Shakespeare was a famous English writer of poems and plays. His English is Early Modern English, and not quite like what people speak or write today. Early Modern English sounded different, partly because the language was beginning a «great vowel shift». Later, many short stories and novels also used English. The novel as we know it is first seen in 18th century English.[9] Therefore, today, many famous songs and movies (cinema films) use the English language.

    Grammar[change | change source]

    English grammar started out based on Old English, which is considered to be a Germanic language. After the Norman French conquered England in 1066, parts of the Latin language were brought to the English language by the Norman French.

    Nouns[change | change source]

    There are different types of nouns in English, like proper nouns and common noun. To show if a noun is plural, which means there is more than one of the noun, usually «-s» is added at the end of a word.[10]

    Pronouns[change | change source]

    Pronouns are words that take the place of a noun to avoid repetition. There are different types of pronouns in the English language. The most important ones are:

    • Personal pronouns
    • Demonstrative pronouns
    • Relative pronouns
    • Interrogative pronouns
    • Indefinite pronouns
    • Dummy pronouns[11]

    Verbs[change | change source]

    Verbs in English show the action or the state of a sentence. Verbs can come in different shapes in a sentence based on the time or condition we are talking about. For example, the verb «eat» changes to «ate» in past.[12]

    Adjectives[change | change source]

    Adjectives are words that describe a noun. In English they always come before a noun to give you more information about that noun. You can see this in the sentence «the red apples are juicy.»

    Spelling[change | change source]

    Written English uses a range of historical spelling patterns that changed over time due to political and cultural changes. As a result, different words can use the same letters and combinations for very different sounds. For example, «-ough» was once a guttural but has become different in «through» (threw), «rough» (ruff), «dough» (doe) or «cough» (coff).[13][14]

    Many English-speaking countries spell words differently. Some words that are spelled one way in the United Kingdom and many other countries in the British Commonwealth are spelled differently in the United States.

    US spelling UK spelling
    armor armour
    color colour
    gray grey
    meter metre
    program programme

    Alphabets[change | change source]

    There are 26 letters in the English alphabet:

    A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

    Vocabulary[change | change source]

    Influences on English vocabulary

    Nearly 60% of the vocabulary in the English language comes from Latin and its descendants, mainly French:

    • Langue d’oïl (French): 29.3%
    • Latin, including modern scientific and technical Latin and Frankish (Germanic language): 28.7%
    • Germanic languages: 24% (inherited from Old English/Anglo-Saxon, Proto-Germanic, Old Norse, etc. without including Germanic words borrowed from a Romance languages)
    • Greek: 5.32%
    • Italian, Spanish and Portuguese: 4.03%
    • Derived from proper names: 3.28%
    • All other languages: less than 1%

    However, the most common words are more often those of Germanic origin. Also, expressions and typical short phrases are often of Germanic origin.

    [change | change source]

    • Indian English
    • American English
    • Australian English
    • British English
    • Canadian English
    • Jamaican English
    • South African English
    • New Zealand English
    • Pakistani English
    • Scottish English

    References[change | change source]

    1. Oxford 2015, Entry: English – Pronunciation.
    2. Crystal, David (ed) 2005. The Penguin Concise Encyclopedia. London: Penguin Reference, pp. 424–426.
    3. «10.1063/1.4831988.4». Default Digital Object Group. 2013-11-15. Retrieved 2023-04-11.
    4. Curtis, Andy. Color, race, and English language teaching: shades of meaning. 2006, page 192.
    5. Crystal, David 2008. Two thousand million?. English Today. 24 (1): 3–6. [1]
    6. Baugh, Albert C. & Cable, Thomas 2012. A history of the English language. 6th ed, London: Routledge. ISBN 0-41-565596-X
    7. «Comparison between English, German and Dutch (in Italian)». Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2013-06-01.
    8. These words come mostly from Greek, but are translated into the Latin alphabet, which English uses.
    9. Ian Watt’s The Rise of the Novel: Studies in Defoe, Richardson and Fielding (London, 1957); John J. Richetti, Popular Fiction before Richardson. Narrative Patterns 1700–1739 (1969); Lennard J. Davis, Factual Fictions: The Origins of the English Novel (New York: Columbia University Press, 1983); J. Paul Hunter, Before Novels: The Cultural Contexts of Eighteenth-Century English Fiction (New York: Norton, 1990).
    10. «What Is a Noun?». Nouns: Types of Nouns With Examples | Grammarly. 2017-03-21. Retrieved 2021-07-17.
    11. «LanGeek | Pronouns in English Grammar». Langeek. Retrieved 2021-07-17.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
    12. «Eat Ate Eaten | Learn English». www.ecenglish.com. Retrieved 2021-07-17.
    13. Smith, Bridie (17 November 2009). «It’s offishal — English iz darned hard to learn». The Age. Retrieved 29 November 2009.
    14. Crystal, David (2012). Spell It Out: The Curious, Enthralling and Extraordinary Story of English Spelling. New York: Picador St. Martin’s Press. pp. 3–4. ISBN 9781250056122.

    Other websites[change | change source]

    • BBC resources for English language students
    • Resources for English language students
    • The main points of English grammar, clearly presented with examples
    • Activities for English language students
    • Tools For English Language

    English NounNouns in English: classification, rules, forms and exceptions. Their morphology, affixation and special usage.

    nouns2.jpg

    Let’s figure out what is a noun and what role it plays in the English language. First of all, noun is a part of speech which defines an object. This should not necessarily be an inanimate object (table, house), but could also be a living creature (girl, man). Not to mention that nouns could be not only material, but also abstract.

    Love, kindness, knowledge – these are the abstract nouns, those that cannot be touched or put into your pocket.

    So we could say that a noun is an object with a variety of its characteristics.

    The classification of English nouns.

    By meaning the English nouns are divided into Proper Nouns and Common Nouns.

    Let’s consider Proper Nouns in detail.

    These include:

    1. Personal names (Carl Bormann, Michael Standy)
    2. Geographical names (Atlantic Ocean, Moscow)
    3. Names of the months and days of the week (August, Wednesday)
    4. Names of the ships, hotels, clubs (Mayflower, Tropicana, House of Blues)

    Notably, many personal nouns became common nouns in the process of word formation (Take a bottle of champagne with you).

    Common Nouns

    1. A group of people or objects which is regarded as a single unit (family, peasantry).
    2. Different materials (steel, iron ore, wood).
    3. Abstract notions (kindness, responsibility).

    By formation the English nouns are divided into:

    1. Simple – nouns without suffixes / prefixes, words are presented only in the base form (mouse, chain, table).
    2. Derivatives – nouns formed by adding a suffix / prefix. In turn, there could be productive and unproductive suffixes. Productive suffixes are called this way because they are involved in the word formation in the modern language. Unproductive suffixes are not involved.

    Let’s present a small table:

    Unproductive suffixes Productive suffixes
    er – driver, collector

    -ist – journalist, accompanist

    -ess – mistress, actress

    -ness – madness, redness

    -ism – socialism, anarchism

    -hood – neighborhood, childhood

    -dom – freedom, boredom

    -ship – friendship, ownership

    -ment – judgment, development

    -ance – importance, appearance

    -ence – dependence, difference

    -ly – slowly, lively

    -ity – curiosity, clarity

    3. Compound nouns are made up of two or more simple words.

    Ways of forming compound nouns:

    • Noun base + noun base (snowball, skyscraper)
    • Adjective base + noun base (blackmail, gentleman)
    • Verb base + noun base (ringtone, pickpocket)

    Countable and uncountable nouns

    Also, English nouns are divided into countable and uncountable nouns.

    Countable nouns are nouns that we can count

    I have two toys. How many toys do you have? – I have five toys (toy – toys)

    My friends always help me with my homework. ( friend – friends)

    Uncountable nouns are little bit complicated. These may include several categories of words, such as:

    • Liquids (water, beer, wine)
    • Materials (plastic, glass)
    • Sciences (mathematics, history)
    • Languages (Japanese, German)
    • Illnesses (flu, mumps)

    And many other categories.

    As usual, uncountable nouns in English could be both in the singular and plural forms.

    This news is very depressing. (News – always in the singular)

    The police did all they could to arrest the criminal.

    I want to buy a new pair of jeans, the old ones are torn. (Police, jeans – always in the plural)

    Some words in the context could be both countable and uncountable.

    This toy is made of paper. (Uncountable, material)

    I want all you papers on my table by lunch time. (Countable, papers here meaning documents)

    The category of number in English

    The plural of countable nouns in English is formed by adding the ending (club – clubs), changing the existing endings (wife – wives), and even by changing the base form of the noun (mouse – mice).

    Category of gender

    It’s hard to say whether there is such a thing as the category of gender in the modern English. In fact, there is only one suffix that is used to form a gender of a noun. It is a feminine suffix “-ess”, and it is used quite rare (host – hostess, waiter – waitress, poet – poetess).

    Video tutorial which explains the classification of English nouns and gives a lot of audio examples of words and sentences on the use of nouns:

    Noun: Definition & Types

    Nouns refer to persons, animals, places, things, ideas, or events, etc. Nouns encompass most of the words of a language.

    Noun can be a/an —  

    • Person – a name for a person: — Max, Julie, Catherine, Michel, Bob, etc.
    • Animal – a name for an animal: — dog, cat, cow, kangaroo, etc.
    • Place – a name for a place: — London, Australia, Canada, Mumbai, etc.
    • Thing – a name for a thing: — bat, ball, chair, door, house, computer, etc.
    • Idea – A name for an idea: — devotion, superstition, happiness, excitement, etc.

    Examples of Noun in sentence

    Different Types of Noun:

    • Proper Noun
    • Common Noun
    • Abstract Noun
    • Concrete Noun
    • Countable Noun
    • Non-countable Noun
    • Collective Noun
    • Compound Noun

    Proper Noun:

    A proper noun is a name which refers only to a single person, place, or thing and there is no common name for it. In written English, a proper noun always begins with capital letters.

    Example: Melbourne (it refers to only one particular city), Steve (refers to a particular person),

    Australia (there is no other country named Australia; this name is fixed for only one country).

    More Examples of Proper Noun

    Common Noun:

    A common noun is a name for something which is common for many things, person, or places. It encompasses a particular type of things, person, or places.

    Example: Country (it can refer to any country, nothing in particular), city (it can refer to any city like Melbourne, Mumbai, Toronto, etc. but nothing in particular).

    So, a common noun is a word that indicates a person, place, thing, etc. In general and a proper noun is a specific one of those.

    More Examples of Common Noun

    Abstract Noun:

    An abstract noun is a word for something that cannot be seen but is there. It has no physical existence. Generally, it refers to ideas, qualities, and conditions.

    Example: Truth, lies, happiness, sorrow, time, friendship, humor, patriotism, etc.

    Abstract Noun examples in sentences

    Concrete Noun:

    A concrete noun is the exact opposite of abstract noun. It refers to the things we see and have physical existence.

    Example: Chair, table, bat, ball, water, money, sugar, etc.

    Countable Noun:

    The nouns that can be counted are called countable nouns. Countable nouns can take an article: a, an, the.

    Example: Chair, table, bat, ball, etc. (you can say 1 chair, 2 chairs, 3 chairs – so chairs are countable)

    Countable Noun examples in sentences

    Non-countable Noun:

    The nouns that cannot be counted are called non-countable nouns.

    Example: Water, sugar, oil, salt, etc. (you cannot say “1 water, 2 water, 3 water” because water is not countable)

    Abstract nouns and proper nouns are always non-countable nouns, but common nouns and concrete nouns can be both count and non-count nouns.

    Non-countable Noun examples in sentences

    Collective Noun:

    A collective noun is a word for a group of things, people, or animals, etc.

    Example: family, team, jury, cattle, etc.

    Collective nouns can be both plural and singular. However, Americans prefer to use collective nouns as singular, but both of the uses are correct in other parts of the world.

    Compound Noun:

    Sometimes two or three nouns appear together, or even with other parts of speech, and create idiomatic compound nouns. Idiomatic means that those nouns behave as a unit and, to a lesser or greater degree, amount to more than the sum of their parts.

    Example: six-pack, five-year-old, and son-in-law, snowball, mailbox, etc.

    More Types of Noun:

    Singular Noun:

    Singular Nouns are namely, singular in number. The base form of any noun is naturally singular and so that is the Singular Noun. 

    Examples:

    Duck, Bush, Man, Mouse, Child, Fish etc. are Singular Nouns.

    Singular Noun in a sentence:

    • I have a pet duck.
    • That big bush is beside our house.
    • He is the man of the house.
    • Ron’s pet mouse is too vicious for such a little creature.
    • Their child has a sound sense of situational adjustments.
    • I’d like that small fish, please.

    Plural Noun:

    The plural forms of the Singular Nouns are Plural Nouns. These nouns determine more than one element.

    Examples:

    Belts, Boxes, Mice, Sheep, People etc. are examples of Plural Noun.

    Plural Noun in a sentence: 

    • There are seven belts in the seat.
    • Let’s unpack those boxes.
    • Our house is scattered with a herd of mice.
    • I’ve chased the sheep back into the shed.
    • These people are getting on my nerves.

    Regular Noun:

    Regular Nouns do not change in spelling when changed into plural; only the regular plural suffixes -s or -es are attached to it according to the grammar and spelling agreement.

    Examples: 

    Singular Noun Plural Noun
    Duck Ducks
    Belt Belts
    Box Boxes
    Bush Bushes
    Apple Apples

    Irregular Noun:

    Irregular Nouns do not have plural suffixes added to them for their plural form and they monumentally change in spelling.

    Examples:

    Singular Noun Plural Noun
    Man Men
    Ox Oxen
    Fox Vixen
    Goose Geese
    Mouse Mice

    Possessive Noun:

    The noun that owns something or has something in its possession is the Possessive Noun. These nouns usually end with an apostrophe before one “s” that determines the possession of the object(s) that follows. 

    Example: 

    • My cat’s litter needs changing very soon.
    • Jacky’s wallet is stolen.
    • Your pet’s feeder is missing.

    Verbal Noun:

    Verb + ing often act as the noun/subject of the sentence instead of posing as a verb and then they become a Verbal Noun. Gerunds can be Verbal Nouns at times. 

    Example: 

    Verb Verbal Noun
    Run Running
    Smoke Smoking
    Kill Killing
    Treat Treating
    • Smoking is injurious to health.
    • Killing the runaway tiger is not a solution.
    • Running for dear life is what thieves do.

    Material Noun:

    Substances made out of tangible materials are usually Material Nouns. These are Common Uncountable Nouns by nature since they mostly determine a certain sector type of product.

    Examples:

    • I lack the common fascination with gold.
    • Coal produces nonrenewable energy.
    • Humans are 70% water.

    Functions of Nouns

    Nouns can be used as a subject, a direct object, and an indirect object of a verb; as an object of a preposition; and as an adverb or adjective in sentences. Nouns can also show possession.

    Subject: The company is doing great. Roses are the flowers of love.

    Direct object: I finally bought a new mobile.

    Indirect object: Max gave Carol another chocolate.

    Object of preposition: Roses are the flowers of love.

    Adverb: The train leaves today.

    Adjective: The office building faces the mall.

    Possession: The lion’s cage is dangerous. My brother’s daughter is adorable.

    Word formation. Noun suffixes in English (grade 9)

    как из глагола сделать существительное в английском

    This is a lesson from the cycle «Word formation in English»  and in it we will consider the common noun suffixes: -er / or, -tion, -ing, -ness, -ence / ance (5). Exercises on word formation of a noun will help you understand how nouns are formed in English using suffixes, as well as prepare for English exams in the form of the OGE and USE.

    for posting on other Internet resources is prohibited. EnglishInn.ru.

    Basic noun suffixes in English (grade 9)

    Remember 5 main noun suffixes. 

    1. er / or (worker)
    2. tion (informaproduction)
    3. ing (reading)
    4. ness (happyness)
    5. ence / ance (difference)

    Next, let’s dwell in more detail on each of them.

    1. Suffixes of nouns formed from a verb

    1. -er / or (doer suffix) dance — dancer work — workercollect — collector

      invent — inventor

    2. -tion (process suffix) collect — collection

      invent — invention

    3. -ingsuffer — suffering warn — warning

      mean — meaning

    Remember three suffixes -er (-or), -tion, -ing, with the help of which nouns are formed from the verb.

    2. Suffixes of nouns formed from an adjective

    1. -nessill — illness

      kind — kindness

    2. -ance / -ence (corresponding adjectives have suffixes: -ant / -ent) important — importance

      different — difference

    Remember two suffixes: -ness, -ence (ance), with the help of which nouns are formed from an adjective.

    Suffixes of nouns in English. Exercises

     Suffixes -ness & -tion Are the most common noun suffixes.
    Exercise 1. Suffix -ness. Translate these nouns and indicate the adjectives from which they are derived.

    foolishness, happiness, seriousness, illness, readiness, richness, strangeness, carelessness, whiteness, cleverness, greatness, brightness

    Note.

    Source: http://englishinn.ru/slovoobrazovanie-suffiksyi-sushhestvitelnyih-v-angliy.html

    Formation of verbs in English

    как из глагола сделать существительное в английском
    Download this online tutorial in PDF

    Verbs in English are formed using suffixes (detached, non-separable), prefixes and using conversion.

    Formation of verbs using separate suffixes

    New verbs are often formed from existing ones using separate suffixes. The most common single suffixes are: back, away, down, in, off, on, out, up, over… Separated suffixes are usually added to monosyllabic verb stems. Matching in form with adverbs, individual suffixes in some cases retain spatial shades of meaning, slightly changing the meaning of the original stem:

    to go (to go) — to go away (to leave),

    to come (to come) — to come back (to return),

    to look (look) — to look up (look up)

    In other cases, adding a separate suffix creates a verb with a completely new meaning:

    to give (to give) — to give up (to give up some activity), to get (to receive) — to get off (get off the vehicle), to go (to go) — to go on (to continue doing something).

    Examples of verbs with separate suffixes:

    away: to go away to leave; to run away escape; to throw away to throw; to do away with smth. destroy, liquidate something; to take away

    back: to come / go back — return

    down: to sit down to sit down; to settle down to settle; to come down to go down; to climb down to get down, get off; to slow down to slow down (The vehicle slowed down at the next turn) to write down to write

    in: to come in to enter (Come in, please!) to get in to enter the transport; to hand in hand in, hand over (Hand in your papers!) to run in to run in; to drop in visit

    off: to bite off bite off; to cut off cut off, chop off; to take off take off (Take off your cap and boots) to switch off off (Switch off the lights, it isn’t dark.) to get off off the vehicle (This is where I usually get off).

    on: to call on to attend (He often called on Helen when she was ill.) to go on to continue (Go on writing!) to carry on to continue some work; to put on put on, put on; to switch on turn on, turn on the light (Switch on the lights, it’s getting dark.) to get on live (How is Mike getting on?)

    out: to get out to go out (Get out! Go away!) to run out to run out; to take out take out; to find out find out; to carry out execute (We should carry out our research.) to cut out cut; to make out understand, understand (I can’t make anything out).

    over: to come over to come (Hey, Kate, come over to my place!) to talk over to discuss; to think over to think (We should think it over).

    up: to come up to come; to drive up to drive up by car; to cheer up to cheer up, to cheer up (Cheer up, Jack! Don’t be sad, Jack!) to get up to get out of bed; to look up to look up; to shut up to shut up (Shut up, Terry!) to make up invent, compose; to wake up wake up

    Formation of verbs using inseparable suffixes

    Of the suffixes of the usual type for the formation of verbs, the suffix -ize is often used, which forms verbs with an abstract meaning: to realize, to privatize, to mobilize, to organize.

    There are also verbs formed from adjectives using the -en suffix: broad (wide) — to broaden (expand) to lengthen, to widen, to redden, to darken.

    Forming verbs using prefixes

    With the help of prefixes, verbs are usually formed from the verbs themselves. Frequent verb prefixes are as follows:

    The prefix ge-, which means repeated action:

    reread

    rebuild

    rewrite (write again, rewrite)

    Verbs with other meanings also have this prefix: to remember, to respect, to recover, etc.

    The prefix dis-, which means an action opposite to that expressed by the derivative verb stem:

    to disagree, to disappear, to disapprove, to discover, to dis.

    The prefix mis-, which means an action performed by an error: to misunderstand (misunderstand), to mispronounce (mispronounce), to misbehave (misbehave), to mistake (make a mistake, mistakenly consider someone else).

    Formation of verbs using conversion

    Thus, verbs are formed mainly from nouns:

    dust — to dust

    a bomb (bomb) — to bomb (bomb)

    water — to water

    a hand (hand) — to hand (hand)

    a head — to head

    a finger (finger) — to finger (press with a finger)

    winter (winter) — to winter (winter)

    The number of verbs formed from nouns by conversion is very large.

    Source: http://englishgu.ru/obrazovanie-glagolov-v-angliyskom-yazyike/

    Suffixes in English: 40 Most Common

    как из глагола сделать существительное в английском

    Hey.

    Source: https://corp.lingualeo.com/ru/2016/11/16/suffiksyi-v-angliyskom-yazyike/

    Methods of forming nouns in English

    How to replenish vocabulary more than 3 times without memorizing? Adopt this method and — voila! Vocabulary enlarged before our eyes.
    This method is word formation. How does this work for nouns?

    Briefly — about the main thing Usually the topic is studied indefinitely. There is a more effective method: covering the entire «puzzle» at a time. Seeing a clear picture, you can easily refine the little things without negativity.

    So, the formation of nouns in English assumes skills:

    1. convert a noun from a verb and vice versa;
    2. use affixes;
    3. put a different emphasis;
    4. replace the consonant at the root;
    5. form compound words.

    Many do not assume how many words they ALREADY know. They simply do not know how to use this wealth competently.
    Having learned 5 skills, you can refer to the dictionary just to check it.

    1. Conversion

    Nouns in English are related to verbs in an interesting way: they can be the same word. This method is called  conversion… This is the first skill. Using it, it is easy to guess about the translation of 60% of English words. Moreover, verbs can be converted not only into nouns, but also into adjectives.

    The examples below will help you understand the phenomenon of conversion.

    Example: love = to love / love.  

    Verb convergent word noun

    dream, dream dream dream
    call name name, title
    lift up lift lift, lift
    to send email mail
    milk milk milk
    pour water water
    mind mind mind, opinion

    Many are embarrassed that in translation into Russian, both words are not the same root. But the language is different.
    It’s funny, but the British created it for themselves! For native speakers, these are absolutely identical words: to milk — milk (milk), to name — name (name — name).

    2. Affixation

    This «scary» word means suffixes plus prefixes. All prefixes are of two types: negative and significant.
    Acquaintance with negative ones has already taken place through borrowing: dysfunction, antispam, deflation. Significant — different in meaning, but amenable to logic.

    Prefixes

    2 groups of prefixes will allow you to find the meaning of a word by context without a dictionary. If you learn the meaning of each prefix separately, the brain starts to panic, it looks for the right algorithm. It takes time, and speech slows down.

    And most importantly, the desire to study the language at all disappears.

    Example: everyone knows the prefixes «dis-«, «de-«, «anti-«. But for some reason they do not notice them in English!
    An important detail: most negative prefixes of nouns work with verbs.  

    Negative prefixes

    Console Examples
    anti- Antistress, antipode, antispam.
    dis- Disharmony, disqualification.
    de- Depiction, departure.
    mis- Misfortune, misunderstanding.
    as- Sedition, separation.
    not- Nonconformist, nonstop.

    Significant prefixes

    Most are present in their native language, in borrowings.

    You can check the skill of forming nouns in English using a dictionary, but after an independent attempt.
    For example, form words: disqualification, pseudoscience, professional, extraordinary, hyperactive, and others. Such training is enjoyable and helps to understand the language.

    Attachment type Examples of prefixes
    involvement Anti-, co-, con-, contra-, vice-.
    censures

    Source: https://www.study.ru/courses/elementary/obrazovanie-sushchestvitelnyh

    Suffixes in English — Learn All

    There can be confusion between suffixes and endings in English (both are often called word endings), besides, English terminology in this matter is slightly different from Russian. Therefore, let’s start with the basic concepts.

    The ending is an inflectional morpheme. It changes the form of a word, but not its meaning, and at the same time carries a grammatical load:

    • pencil — pencils (ending indicates plural)
    • work — worked (the ending indicates the elapsed time)

    The suffix, in turn, is a derivational morpheme. Suffixes in English create new words, either by changing the meaning of the original one, or by converting one part of speech to another:

    • red — reddish (red — reddish)
    • teach — teacher (teach — teacher)

    There are very few endings in English — these are -s (-es), -ed and -ing. There are a lot of suffixes in English. In this article, we will consider only the most common ones.

    Profession and occupation suffixes (-er, -ent, -ess)

    The -er suffix is ​​perhaps the most common and productive for «doers.» With it, you can form a noun from almost any verb.

    • write> writer — write> writer
    • bake> baker — oven> baker
    • paint> painter — paint> painter

    Most modern words denoting the performer of an action are formed precisely with his help. This also applies to inanimate objects.

    • printer — printer
    • scanner — scanner

    Many words that come from French and Latin have the -or suffix:

    • doctor — doctor
    • tailor — tailor
    • actor — actor

    The English suffix -ist often denotes an activity related to science and medicine:

    • scientist — scientist
    • dentist — dentist
    • biologist — biologist

    It also denotes an adherent of any views and beliefs:

    • pacifist — pacifist
    • communist — communist
    • realist — realist

    Other suffixes in English of words of Latin and Greek origin:

    Suffix -ian:

    • musician — musician
    • librarian — librarian
    • mathematician — mathematician

    Suffix -ent:

    • student — student
    • resident — resident, resident
    • agent — agent

    Suffix -ant:

    • informant — informant
    • assistant — assistant
    • confidant — confidant

    The -ess suffix is ​​one of the few «feminine» suffixes in English:

    • waitress — waitress
    • actress — actress
    • princess — princess

    Process, action, phenomenon suffixes (-ment, -ion, -ism)

    The suffix in English -ment is needed when forming verbal nouns and means an action or its result:

    • movement — movement
    • entertainment — entertainment
    • concealment — concealment

    The -ion suffix also denotes an action, process, or result of that process:

    • revolution — revolution
    • isolation — isolation
    • restriction — restriction

    The suffix -ism denotes a system of views, beliefs:

    • racism — racism
    • communism — communism
    • pacifism — pacifism

    State, quality, property suffixes (-ance / -ence, -dom, -hood, -ity, -ness, -ship, -th)

    The -ance / -ence suffix in a noun usually matches the -ant / -ent suffix in an adjective:

    • different — difference
    • important — importance (important — importance)
    • independent — independence

    The suffixes in English -hood and -ship mean a person’s condition associated with his age, social relations, and sometimes activity; or a group of people united by this state.

    • childhood — childhood
    • motherhood — motherhood
    • priesthood — clergy
    • friendship — friendship
    • internship — internship, internship

    The suffix -dom means states and properties of a broader meaning:

    • freedom — freedom
    • wisdom — wisdom
    • martyrdom — Martyrdom

    The suffix in English -ness means possession of some quality and serves to form nouns from adjectives:

    • kindness — kindness
    • usefulness — usefulness
    • vastness — vastness

    The -th suffix more often means physical properties:

    • strength — strength
    • length — length
    • warmth — warm

    The suffix -ity means property, quality, and is common for words of Latin origin:

    • brevity — brevity
    • velocity — speed
    • purity — purity

    Adjective suffixes

    The suffix -ful in English means possession of quality (and is related to the adjective full — «full»):

    • beautiful — beautiful
    • useful — useful

    The -less suffix is ​​opposite in meaning to the previous one and means lack of quality:

    • careless — carefree
    • harmless — harmless

    The suffix -able, -ible characterizes the property or accessibility for any action:

    • edible — edible
    • portable — portable, portable
    • admirable — admirable

    The suffixes -ic and -al mean «related, related»:

    • heroic — heroic
    • mythic — mythical
    • cultural — cultural
    • musical — musical

    The -ous suffix also carries a characteristic:

    • dangerous — dangerous
    • nutritious — nutritious

    The English suffix -ish has several meanings:

    expresses similarity (in terms of appearance, behavior)

    • girlish — girlish
    • childich — childish, childish
    • foolish — stupid

    weakens the meaning of an adjective

    • reddish — reddish
    • narrowish — narrowish

    means nationality, language or country

    • English — English
    • Swedish — Swedish

    The suffix -ive means possession of a property, the ability:

    • attractive — attractive
    • sedative — sedative

    The English suffix -y is used to form many simple adjectives:

    • rainy — rainy
    • dirty — dirty
    • sunny — sunny

    Vertex suffixes

    Verb suffixes are not so diverse and almost all have the meaning of «doing something» or «becoming something.»

    Suffix -ate

    • motivate — to motivate
    • activate — activate

    Suffix -en

    • lengthen — lengthen
    • strengthen — strengthen

    Suffix -ify

    • verify — confirm
    • clarify — to clarify

    Suffix -ize, -ise

    • visualize — render
    • neutralize — neutralize

    Adverb suffix

    Adverbs are formed with just one suffix in English -ly:

    • loudly — loudly
    • beautifully — beautifully
    • politely — politely

    We read further:

    10 ways to tell an adjective from an adverb in English

    What are the types of sentences in English

    5 simple rules for word order in English

    Adverb, know your place!

    Source: https://skyeng.ru/articles/chto-vy-ne-znali-o-suffiksah-v-anglijskom

    Plural in English — online lessons for beginners

    Read the entire lesson and do a short, easy listening exercise (a translation is shown after each assignment). In the second block of the exercise, you will be asked to write the same phrases under dictation, so listen and read carefully the phrases that you compose in the first block.  

      Start exercise  

    In most cases, the plural in English is formed very simply — the ending “-s» or «-Is«, which read differently depending on the consonant in front of it — voiced or voiceless:

    For words ending in «s, ss, ch, tch, x» (hissing or whistling sounds), the ending «-Is«, Which reads loudly [of].

    In a side-by-side exercise (see the main exercise below), an English noun is shown; to see it in the plural, just click on the word.

    In the lesson exercise, beginners will be able to compose phrases on their own — click on the English words to translate the phrase proposed in Russian. A few words that we will meet in the exercise:

    • to want [that uOnt] — to want (the verb following the verb «to want» requires the use of a particle «to«- I want to help you — I want to help you) to have [tu hEv] — to have one [uan] — one

    Features of the use of plural nouns

    Grammatical addition: in English, the plural can be in «countable nouns«. There are a number of nouns that are used only in the singular (we emphasize, in English; the use of words in Russian and English can both coincide and diverge, but we need to get out of the habit of making comparisons with the native language, and plunge into the logic of English):

    • money [mani] — money hair [hea] — hair advice [adv] — advice

    A number of other nouns are used only in the plural form:

    • glasses [glAsiz] — glassesgoods [goodz] — goods trousers [trauzez] — trousers people [people] — people (singular, but implies the plural)

    A number of English nouns form the plural in a special way:

    • man — men [men] — [men] — man / men, people woman — women [umen] — [wiming] — woman / women (we prepare the organs of speech for pronouncing [y], but immediately pronounce the next sound) child — children [child] — [chIldren] — child / children

    A separate lesson will be devoted to these features of the plural in English; now it is important for beginners to remember the basic rule for the formation of the plural.

    Plural adjectives

    Adjectives in english do not change in the plural and do not change by gender:

    • good guy [good boy] — good boy good boys [good boys] — good boys good girl [good girl] — good girl good girls [good girls] — good girls

    A noun before another noun can act as an adjective; in this case, it is not used in the plural:

    • life situations — life situations

    ▲ Start online exercise

    Next: Articles A, AN, THE and a bit of TO. • Tutor: preparation for the exam and exam, passing international exams.
    «My day» / «Working day» / «My day off»
    TEST elementary / intermediate

    Source: http://english.prolingvo.info/beginner/plural.php

    Formation of adjectives in English

    The formation of adjectives in English is a rather important and interesting topic. Of course, you can speak English at a fairly high level without going into such details, but such information will not be superfluous.

    As in Russian, English adjectives can be derived from other parts of speech. These are usually verbs and nouns. Adjectives are formed using suffixes and prefixes. So, first things first.

    Formation of English adjectives using prefixes

    Prefixes, or prefixes, are added at the beginning of a word and change its meaning. Usually they change the meaning of the adjective to the opposite, negative. A few examples:

    • un— (unlucky)
    • in— (invisible)
    • dis— (discontent)
    • il— (illegal)
    • ir— (irrational)
    • im— (immovable)

    There are several prefixes that change the meaning of a word, but without a negative meaning:

    • pre— (pre-emptive)
    • hyper— (hypertensive, hyperactive)

    Formation of English adjectives using suffixes

    There are a lot of varieties of English adjectives formed in the suffix way. As an example, there is a picture with the main suffixes, as well as a few examples of words.

    • ful (wonderful, graceful)
    • less (pointless, careless)
    • able (vulnerable, tolerable)
    • ible (terrible, permissible)
    • ant (pleasant, hesitant)
    • ent (different, patient)
    • ic (scientific, iconic)
    • ive (active, impressive)
    • y (angry, dirty)
    • ing (interesting, worrying)
    • ed (confused, excited)
    • al (general, typical)
    • (i) an (Victorian, American)
    • You reprise the theme of the  (gorgeous, famous)
    • ish (childish, Irish)

    There is also a classification of English adjectives according to the parts of speech from which they are derived. Adjectives can be formed from nouns, verbs, as well as from other adjectives using various suffixes and prefixes, examples of which have already been considered. The very form of the word may also change. For example, the adjective long is formed from the noun length with a change at the root of the word.

    Source: https://english-bird.ru/forming-adjectives/

    Formation of nouns in English: suffixes, prefixes, etc.

    To do it right assignments 26 — 31 from section «Grammar and Vocabulary» on the Unified State Exam in English, You need to know the most used prefixes and suffixes of nouns. 

    I want to say right away that the article will be long, so be patient and read it to the end.

    Helpful advice: 

    Be sure to learn all the words from this article, as they are selected from real assignments of past years, which were proposed for implementation on the exam in English.

    Work separately with each block, spelling out the words, even if they seem familiar to you.

    Remember that in assignments 26 — 31 along with your ability to form new words using various affixes, your spelling skills are assessed!

    Education model: Verb + er = Noun

    When adding a suffix — er to a verb or noun, a noun is formed, denoting a profession, occupation of a person, as well as the names of some objects:

    To write — writer, to sing — singer, to drive — driver, to teach — teacher, to examine — examiner, to learn — learner, to build — builder, to loaf — loafer (quitter)

    Trumpet — trumpeter (trumpeter), bank — banker (banker), finance — financier (financier)

    To contain — container (container), to dust — duster (duster), to grate — grater (grater), to mix — mixer (mixer), to shake — shaker (shaker), to blend — blender (blender), to open — opener (can-opener)

    Mince (minced meat) — mincer (meat grinder)

    Exception:   to lie (lie) — LIAR   (liar / liar)

    Education model:Verb + or = noun

    When adding a suffix — or a noun denoting a profession, occupation of a person is formed to the verb (these are mainly nouns of Latin and French origin):

    To act — actor (actor), to advise — advisor / —er (advisor, consultant), to animate — animator (animator), to conduct — conductor (conductor), to create — creator (creator), to decorate — decorator (decorator, painter, wallpaper passer), to direct — director (director, director), to educate — educator (teacher), to illustrate — illustrator (illustrator), to invent — inventor (inventor), to invest — investor (investor, contributor), to instruct — instructor (instructor), to translate — translator (translator), to sail — sailor (sailor), to visit — visitor (visitor), to conquer — coqueror (conqueror)

    Here are some more nouns with the suffix or, to remember:

    doctor, professionalor, sculptureor, sponsor, ancestor (ancestor), tutor, mentor (mentor)

    Education model: Noun + ist = Noun

    When adding a suffix  -ist a noun is formed to the noun, denoting a profession, occupation of a person:

    art — art (artist), cello — cell (cellist), chemistry — chem (chemist, pharmacist), drama — dramat (playwright), ecology — ecolog (ecologist), economics — econom (economist), geology — geolog (geologist), genetics — genetic (geneticist), guitar — guitar (guitarist), journal — journal (journalist), medal — medal (medalist), meteorology — meteorolog (meteorologist), optimism — optim

    Source: https://crownenglishclub.ru/dlya-nachinayushhih/obrazovanie-sushhestvitelnyh-v-anglijskom-yazyke-suffiksy-pristavki-i-dr.html

    Formation of words in English in examples

    As in our native Russian, in other languages, words are also added, for example, with suffixes, as a result of which a new word is obtained. Knowledge of how words are formed in English opens up quite a lot to the student. Having mastered some simple rules and looking at a few examples, you will soon learn to intuitively “create” new phrases as you speak. Fortunately, this is easier in English than in Russian.

    Nouns are the basis for word formation. It is from them that, as a rule, comes the formation of verbs, adjectives, as well as their various degrees. It is worth noting that English words are not inflected for cases, only prepositions are used for this.

    There are many types of word formation. However, they are not difficult to learn. For a start, it’s a good idea to know how they are created.

    Conversion: we create a new one without changing anything

    It is common in the English language such a change when nothing changes, except for the part of speech. Such is the pun, however, it is. Most often, a noun is transformed, becoming a verb. In this case, the spelling and pronunciation remain the same. This is called conversion.

    Attention! This is not a rule, that is, you cannot just take any noun and use it instead of a verb. It’s just that a lot of words are created in English that way. There are many examples:

    • a look — look
    • to look at — look
    • present — a gift
    • to present — to be present; present
    • present — present

    It should be separately noted here that the word «present» in English is one of the many forms of the verb. It is included here to illustrate how multifaceted the use of the same word is in this case.

    There are also words where the spelling remains the same, but the stress changes. A change in stress occurs along with a change in part of speech:

    Conversion words are not worth experimenting with. Especially if you are with native speakers or if you are communicating with those who know it better than you. This type and the moments when it can be applied are studied in the process, as if by themselves.

    Composition

    Composition is a simple «mathematics of words». In this case, 2 words just add up into one. This is akin to our «plumbing» and the like. It’s the same in English.

    New words are formed in this way simply — there are practically no additional letters for connection, most often the original words are simply written together or with a hyphen:

    • Schoolday — school day (in Russian it is advisable to replace it with «school day»).
    • Air-base — air base.

    Changing parts of speech using suffixes

    There are several suffixes in English that allow you to conveniently change the part of speech. In this case, most often the «connecting part» does not change.

    In Russian it is more difficult: beauty is beautiful. That is, to transform it into an adjective, you also need to change the ending of the original «beauty». In English, a suffix is ​​simply added, and occasionally you only have to change one letter.

    Here only the letter «y» has changed. In many cases, this is not required either.

    How to write adjective comparison forms

    Comparison of adjectives is about the same as in Russian. Let’s remember: high — higher — highest (highest).

    In English, suffixes are used for this:

    — er for comparison;

    — the + word + suffix est for superlative.

    • tall (high) — taller — the tallest.

    This is how all comparisons are formed; no more than a dozen exceptions. It should be remembered that if the original variant ends in «y», then before the suffix it will be replaced with «i». Also, in all cases when the word ends with «e», instead of «er» will be simply «r», instead of «est» — «st». The second «e» is, as it were, eaten.

    This addition rule is valid for any suffixes, not just comparative degrees. Exceptions are very rare.

    «-Ful» and «-less» for adjectives

    There are not so many adjectives that exist on their own, which have not been affected in any way by the word formation of English words. More than half of all adjectives are formed with various suffixes. Among them «-ful» and «-less» — they require separate consideration.

    Literally, they can be translated as «a lot, full» and «little, not enough», respectively.

    • Success is success.
    • Successful — «full of success», or rather successful.

    This is how many adjectives are formed. In this case, as in all others, it must be borne in mind that not every method and not every word is suitable. Big experiments are not worth carrying out. But knowing all the suffixes will make translation from English several times easier. Just knowing the translation of one noun, reading a book or listening to another person, you can instantly draw a conclusion about what this or that adjective means.

    • help — help
    • helpless — helpless

    If you come across words familiar to you with the addition of the suffixes «-ful» and «-less», you can first translate them verbatim and immediately recall a simpler and more frequently used translation.

    Formation of adjectives from verbs

    There is another way to «make» an adjective from a verb. There are the following suffixes used for this purpose:

    1. — able;
    2. — en;
    3. — al;
    4. — ible;
    5. — ant;
    6. — ent.

    It should be noted that these are far from all, but the most used suffixes. As you learn English, you will most likely soon learn to guess what this or that suffix means if you didn’t know it before:

    • Eat — eatable
    • Effect — effective

    How to make a noun out of a noun?

    Also, with the help of simple suffixes -or and -er, the names of professions, statuses and the like are created. Sometimes from nouns, and sometimes from other parts of speech, verbs, for example.

    • Bike — biker
    • Teach — teacher
    • Work — worker

    This rule is quite common. Basically, this is how the occupation is indicated in English: by adding a suffix, as a rule, to a noun or to a verb, you get a new noun that characterizes a person by his activities or hobbies. Sometimes such a word can also mean the object with which the action is performed:

    • To mix — mixer

    Other endings are also used for the same purpose: -ment, -ent, -ant:

    • to study — student

    How do you know which ending to use? Most often, short endings are added to short words, and long endings to long ones. Also, if you don’t know how to do it correctly, try to orient yourself by ear: substitute what sounds better. The rules were invented for a reason, they are quite intuitive.

    «-Ly» and «-en»: Formation of adverbs and adjectives

    To make an adjective or adverb out of a noun, the suffix «-ly» or «y» is often added:

    • Friend — friendly
    • Luck — lucky

    With the help of all the same «-ly» and «-y», adverbs can be formed from adjectives:

    • Sad — sadly
    • Bad — badly

    There is also a suffix «-en», with the help of which an object is converted into a property:

    • Wood — wooden
    • Gold — golden

    Word formation using prefixes

    In addition to suffixes, there are also so-called prefixes in English. In a sense, they are analogous to Russian prefixes and prepositions, many of them can even be translated.

    Among the common ones are «un-«, as well as «ir-«, analogs of the particle «not»:

    • Irregular — irregular
    • Unknown — unknown

    For the same purpose, the following prefixes are used:

    1. of;
    2. im;
    3. il;
    4. mis;
    5. non;
    6. say;
    7. anti.

    There are also prefixes that mean «over», «over», «overly»:

    1. about;
    2. super;
    3. ultra;
    4. extra.

    The list of the listed forms of word formation in English, given above, is not complete. This topic is very extensive, it requires more in-depth study. However, the main methods of word formation are shown, those that are used most often.

    It will be difficult to just learn and apply them, but you can easily recognize new words in the language, just remembering this set of rules. It should be noted that it is very difficult to predict which particular suffix or prefix will be used. But in the process of studying you will often meet with them and gradually you will be able to remember their meaning automatically.

    Article recommended by an expert: Maria Solomatina

    Source: https://1hello.ru/grammatika/obrazovanie-slov-v-anglijskom-yazyke-v-primerax.html

    Nouns in English (The Nouns): gender, classification, method of formation, 100 popular nouns

    In this article we will talk about nouns in English, about their structure, classification, method of formation and use cases. And also you will find out which nouns are the most popular today.

    A noun (the noun) is a word that is the name of something, for example, a person, object, place, quality, concept, etc. Answers the questions what is this? (what is this?) and who is this? (who is this?). The noun comes from the Latin word nomen (name).

    Gender of nouns in English

    In some languages, the noun has gender. This means that it «forces» other words, such as an adjective, to change their spelling according to certain rules. In Russian: a beautiful girl, an interesting film, etc. The gender category in grammar has nothing to do with the gender (gender) category in biology.

    In English grammar, nouns have no gender category. But, on the other hand, the concept of the biological sex of a person or an object has a definite impact on some areas of English grammar.

    The choice of a particular noun in English depends on where the personal or possessive pronoun occupies in the sentence. But such a difference in gender is noticeable only with nouns in the singular.

    For example, the

    — He didn’t appreciate his help. — He did not appreciate his help
    — He didn’t appreciate it. — He didn’t appreciate it.

    Despite the fact that before the word help is the possessive pronoun his, it does not become masculine, however, there is a certain «echo».

    But with all this, according to some groups of nouns in English that name people, it is possible to determine whether it is masculine or feminine.

    man — woman
    husband — wife

    The genus of some animals can be distinguished by their name.

    Male (male) A cock — cock

    A bull — bull

    Female A hen — chicken

    A cow — cow

    Below is a table of masculine / feminine nouns.

    As for the neuter gender, it can only be determined by the pronouns it and its.

    — The truth will emerge. It always does. — The truth will be revealed. It always opens up.

    Nouns denoting inanimate objects and abstract concepts are also neuter: government, summer, brochure, etc.

    With some nouns of a general gender (i.e. when the word can be both masculine and feminine), you can determine the gender if you have the necessary information. But if there is no such knowledge, then choosing a suitable pronoun becomes problematic. For example,

    — a driverhe / she (driver) — the cookhe / she (cook)

    — doctorhe / she (doctor)

    In the informal colloquial version of the English language, a solution was found — the pronoun their is most often used instead of his / her, even despite the singular number. Many believe that this is grammatically incorrect, however, this option has taken root and is widely used.

    — Someone has left their coat in my room. “Someone left their coat in my office.

    — Today, I picked up a few things at the store, and then I picked up my childs at school. Just a regular day in my lifes, many other daies! — Today I bought a few things in the store, then I took the children from school. Just an ordinary day in my life, just like every other day!

    At first glance, quite normal sentences with several nouns. But this is only for the first time. In fact, several errors can be found here. Pay attention to the following words — childs, lifes, daies. The plural is incorrectly formed in these words.

    Using the example of this sentence, it becomes clear that it is important to pay attention, it is necessary to use the noun in the singular or in the plural, and, accordingly, to know the rules for the formation of plural.

    There are several basic rules for the formation of plural nouns in English.

    • 1. Most nouns in English require the addition of an ending —s. For example,

    Source: https://englishmix.ru/grammatika/nouns/sushhestvitelnye-v-angliyskom-the-noun

    Word formation in English

    High USE results in English are a real opportunity for school graduates to enter universities for specialties that require proficiency in English. According to the official data, the section «Grammar and Vocabulary», where the language competence of graduates is checked, the examinees perform worse than the sections «Listening» and «Reading», so preparation for it requires serious attention. But word formation tasks seem to be especially difficult for graduates.

    In different textbooks, word formation exercises are found, but there is no proper systematization in any of them. In this regard, it became necessary to create a system of exercises together with the generalization and systematization of students’ knowledge on the topic «Word formation».

    At first glance, it may seem that there are many such exercises in any collection. But the structure of this collection is such that the systematization is carried out from simple to complex with increasing and expanding information.

    First, students practice word formation using affixes of only nouns, then only adjectives, then nouns and adjectives, after which verbs, adverbs and numbers are added. There are exercises to recognize the suffixes of various parts of speech, to determine the composition of words.

    The selection of exercises ends with a test, which includes all types of exercises.

    This system of exercises can be used in preparation for the exam by repeating the topic «Word formation with the help of affixes».

    Word formation using affixes

    Many new words in English are formed by affixing, when the prefixes en-joy, dis-, re-read or the suffixes develop-ment, self-ish are added to the beginning or end of a word (root). Affixes are prefixes and suffixes. Prefixes are at the beginning of a word, and suffixes are at the end. Prefixes, as a rule, change the meaning of a word, but do not change its belonging to one or another part of speech:

    order (noun) order — disorder (noun) disorder.

    Suffixes are used to form one part of speech from another:
    beauty (noun) beautiful (adjective) beautiful.

    Negative prefixes

    Negative prefixes — un-, in-, dis-, non-.
    Un- comfortable — uncomfortable, limited — unlimited. The prefix un- is sometimes attached to verbs to express the opposite action: to load — to unload, to lock — to unlock,

    in-

    ability — inability, complete — incomplete. Before l, the prefix in- turns into il-, before r — into ir-, and before m and p — into im-: legal — illegal, regular — irregular,

    patient — impatient.

    Dis- This prefix expresses negation or opposite action: negation opposite action to — to dis, to appear — to disappear, honest — dishonest, to arm — to disarm. Non- Words prefixed with non- are most often hyphenated:

    conductor — non-conductor.

    Prefixes with different meanings

    Prefix Value Compliance with the Russian prefix Examples
    anti- negation anti anti fascist — antifascist
    co- between, mutually co- existence — co-existence
    counter- counter- attack — counterattack
    ex- former the ex- champion — ex-champion
    one- делать  rich — enrich
    inter- between, among, mutually national — international
    mis- wrong, wrong to understand — to myunderstand
    over- over, overly re- to load — to overload

    Source: http://www.englishege.ru/grammar/150-slovoobrazovanie-v-anglijskom-yazyke.html

    The participle in English (The Participle)

    According to the impersonal forms of the verb, we only have the English participle for dessert. And here I have 2 news for you. I’ll start with the good one: a participle in English can correspond to a Russian participle. Bad news: the English participle can also correspond to the Russian participle. And bonus news: the English participle can be easily confused with a gerund. And in a whisper: the English participle has several forms. 

    Now, don’t panic! Once you probably confused the letters «G» and «J» in the English alphabet, but this is already a distant past. We’ll figure it out, put it on the shelves and go to practice.


    What is an English participle

    This is another impersonal form of the verb that combines the following properties:

    — verb (denotes action)
    broken
    heart — broken heart;

    — adjective (can answer the question «which»)  
    working
    machine — a working mechanism;

    — adverbs (can answer the question «how?», «Where?», «Where?», «When?», «Why?», «For what purpose?», «To what extent?») 
    He was rather furious asking Ann about the school marks — He was pretty angry asking Anya about her grades. (Was angry when? Asking for grades)


    Forms of the English participle

    There are two main types:

    1. participle I (Participle I), or present participle (Present Participle):

    1.1. Present Participle Simple
    This is an imperfect analogue of our Russian participle or gerunds.

    Walking Look at that walking man. Look at that man walking.

    I can’t be serious walking with you in the street. I can’t be serious walking down the street with you.

    1.2. Present participle perfect
    This is a perfect analogue of the Russian gerunds.

    Having done
    Having done the work she went home. After completing the work, she went home.

    Source: https://iloveenglish.ru/theory/anglijskaya_grammatika/prichastie_v_anglijskom_yazike

    English nouns (The Noun)

    ›Grammar and rules› Nouns ›English nouns (The Noun): structure, education, role in a sentence

    The bitter truth when learning English is that it will not be very easy to immediately form beautiful sentences with introductory words and participial phrases. The fact is that, as in Russian, you first need to gain an active and passive vocabulary.

    At the initial stage, it is not necessary to memorize some high-flown and fanciful adjectives in order to amaze the native speakers. Even if you achieve this goal, the conversation will not work out for you, because conversations in everyday life are usually about everyday trifles.

    That is why let’s look at English nouns, touch on their differences, ways of education and compose the top 100 most common English words of this part of speech.

    First, let’s figure out what English nouns are.

    The Noun ([naun]) or noun in English is an independent part of speech that denotes an object / person / phenomena / abstract concepts and answers the questions what is this? (what is this?) and who is this? (who is this?).

    Depending on their structure, meaning and method of formation, nouns can be divided into several groups.

    English nouns: structure

    English nouns are formed by:

    • Rhoda (gender)
    • Case
    • Number

    Gender of nouns

    The gender of nouns in English is masculine, feminine and neuter. There is no grammatical ending for separating genders in English, so they do not change by gender, they do not obey any grammar rule, which greatly facilitates the use of nouns. However, when replacing nouns with pronouns, it should be borne in mind that:

    • The pronouns he (he) and she (she) are used when talking about people:
    Mom’s cooking.

    (Mom loves to cook.)

    She’s cooking.

    (She loves to cook.)

    The student is smart.

    (This student is smart.)

    He is smart.

    (He is smart.)

    Liz hasn’t found beautiful dresses.

    (Liz couldn’t find any pretty dresses.)

    She hasn’t found beautiful dresses.

    (She couldn’t find any pretty dresses.)

    • The pronoun it (it) is used when talking about the neuter gender, that is, about inanimate objects and animals.
    The dog was lying next to me.

    (The dog was lying next to me.)

    It was lying next to me.

    (She was lying next to me.)

    The book was written in 1996.

    (The book was written in 1996.)

    It was written in 1996.

    (It was written in 1996.)

    Now pet owners often use pronouns she / he in relation to them when they know their gender, so this English form of noun replacement is also possible.

    Cases of nouns

    The grammar of the English language has two cases in its arsenal:

    • The general case is the case that absolutely all nouns have. In this form, they are given in dictionaries and textbooks. The noun has no ending in this case.
    nature nature
    England England
    grammar grammar
    • Possessive case — a case that is usually characteristic of animate objects. Such a case shows that some object or feature belongs to a particular person. The form is formed by adding an apostrophe to the noun and the ending –s. Let’s take a look at some of the features of using this form on tables:
    • If the noun is in singular, an apostrophe and the ending -s are added to it:
    Jane’s family Jane’s family
    sister’s book sister’s book
    • If the noun is plural and ends in -s, then only an apostrophe is added to it:
    brothers’ presents brothers gifts
    singers’ concerts concerts of singers
    • If a singular noun ends in -s, you can use two options:
    Hopkins’s role Role of Hopkins
    Hopkins’ role
    • If a subject or sign refers to several nouns at once, then the apostrophe and the ending are used only with the last one:
    Tito and mia’s project Tito and Mia’s project
    Helen and george’s ideas Helen and George’s ideas
    • If a subject or sign refers to several nouns separately, then an apostrophe and an ending are used with each:

    Source: https://speakenglishwell.ru/anglijskie-sushhestvitelnye-the-noun/

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