The Angry mob pelted stones at the police take out the nouns in the following sentences and state whether they are common proper collective or abstract noun
Answers
Answered by
68
Answer:
1. Angry - Abstract Noun
2. mob - Collective Noun
3. stones - Common Noun
4. police - Collective Noun
Please mark me as brainliest
Answered by
0
Answer:
In the sentence "mob" and "police" are collective nouns, whereas "stones" is a plural common noun.
Explanation:
- A collective noun is used to name a group of people, things, animals or objects. It refers to several objects as one and though it comprises of many units, a collective noun is usually treated as a singular noun.
- The word "mob" is a collective noun as it refers to a large group of people and "police" is often used to refer to more than one police officer.
- Nouns that refer to things, groups, or locations that are not specific are called common nouns. This indicates that, in contrast to proper nouns, they aren't utilised in a manner that identifies particular individuals, locations, or things.
- If a common noun is used at the start of the sentence, it should be capitalised; otherwise, it should not be.
- "Stones" is a common noun as it does not refer to any particular stone. Due to the fact that it contains the suffix "-s_" it is also a plural noun.
#SPJ2
Similar questions
Social Sciences,
8 months ago
Science,
1 year ago
Political Science,
1 year ago
CBSE BOARD XII,
1 year ago