21. Nouns are Naming Words.

The noun is a part of speech. A noun names a person, a place, a thing, or an idea.

Some nouns name a person.
Examples: Mary, teacher, Daddy, Grandpa, doctor, baby

Some nouns name a place.
Examples: school, home, County Hospital, playground

Some nouns name a thing.
Examples: dog, Main Street, ball, hamburger

Some nouns name an idea.
Examples: sadness, love, fear, hope (these nouns are often feelings)

A noun that does not name a specific person, place, or thing is called a common noun. Common nouns begin with a lowercase letter.

A noun that names a specific person, place, or thing is called a proper noun. Proper nouns must be capitalized.

common noun: dog
proper noun: Rover

common noun: street
proper noun: Main Street

common noun: school
proper noun: Central Middle School

common noun: teacher
proper noun: Mr. Smith

Some nouns can be common sometimes and proper other times. The word mother is one of those words.

That lady is my mother. You are talking about the lady so mother is lowercase.

Dear Mother, I hope you are well. Now you are talking to your mother and calling her by name, so you must capitalize the word.

Remember: a noun is a part of speech that names a person, a place, a thing, or an idea. Capitalize proper nouns because they name a specific person, place, or thing.

  • Now you try it: Write a common noun that names a person. Now write a proper noun for that person. Write a common noun that names a place. Now write a proper noun for that place. Write a common noun that names a thing. Finally write a common noun that names an idea. Now you understand that nouns give names to a person, a place, a thing, or an idea.