English, asked by raguprasaths5388, 4 months ago

is subject is a noun or naming words​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
1

A noun is a word that represents a person, place, or thing. Everything we can see or talk about is represented by a word. That word is called a "noun." You might find it useful to think of a noun as a "naming word."

Often a noun is the name for something we can touch (e.g., "lion," "cake," "computer"), but sometimes a noun names something we cannot touch (e.g., "bravery," "mile," "joy").

Answered by sharadpawar45
0

Answer:

A noun is a word that represents a person, place, or thing. Everything we can see or talk about is represented by a word. That word is called a "noun." You might find it useful to think of a noun as a "naming word."

Often a noun is the name for something we can touch (e.g., "lion," "cake," "computer"), but sometimes a noun names something we cannot touch (e.g., "bravery," "mile," "joy").

Explanation:

for example:

Person: soldier, Alan, cousin, lawyer

Place: house, London, factory, shelter

Thing. This includes:

Objects: table, London Bridge, chisel, nitrogen, month, inch, cooking

Animals: aardvark, rat, shark, Mickey

Ideas: confusion, kindness, faith, Theory of Relativity, joy

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