Noun Worksheets

What is the Purpose of Nouns?

When learning a language, grasping its grammar could be its most technical aspect. It helps you structure your sentences and speak with the utmost confidence. Even when you write, your sentence structures speak perfection through and through. Noun happens to be one of the most important topics of grammar. From acting as the subject of a sentence and performing a verb's action - noun is the part of grammar you should have pure mastery of. Precisely put, a noun is mostly the subject of a sentence and the basic requirement to structure a sentence. Following are the functions of a noun: A direct object of a verb or a indirect object of a verb - object of a preposition or sometimes a compliment.

What's Correct?

Complete the sentences by putting a circle around the correct pronoun. Write the pronoun I, me on the line.


Is, Am, or Are?

Circle the verb that best completes the sentence. Use the verbs: is, am, are.

Possessive Form

Complete the sentences by using the possessive form of the noun in parenthesis. Write the possessive nouns on the lines.

Noun Boxes

Look for the nouns in the sentences. Put a box around the nouns. If it is a proper noun, put a circle around it.

Pronouns

Complete the sentences by putting a circle around the correct pronoun. Write the pronoun she, her on the line.


Find Them

Where are they in the sentences?


Find the Abstract

An abstract noun names a concept or an idea - something that you feel or think about.


Concrete or Abstract

Think of a concrete version that is related to each abstract form below.


Take Two

We work the same skill that we just explored.


Spotting Them

Find all of them in the sentences that are presented to you.


Go Down Under...

Underline all the concrete nouns in the sentences.


Plurals

Write the plural form or each noun.


Person, Place, or Thing

On the first line, write the name of the noun. On the second line, write whether it is a person, a place, or a thing.


Ends in O

Write the plural form of each word on the line.


Circle'em

Circle a the words that identify a person, place, or thing.


Common

Read each sentence. If the bolded noun in each sentence is common, circle "common."


X Marks the Spot

Put an X in the box next to every word that is a noun.


Under Them

Another identification activity for you.


Describe It

Match the nouns with the right description.



How Are Nouns Classified?

There are eight parts of speech, and nouns are one of them. Nouns are naming words for a person, place, thing, a notion, or a collection of things. Nouns are classified in multiple branches, but two basic classifications are proper nouns and common nouns. Proper nouns are the name of a particular person or a place, and it is their unique identity. One's own name is a noun. Example: Joe is going to Kansas City to meet his grandparents. Here, Joe and Kansas City are proper nouns. The thing to note here is that both Joe and Kansas City are written with their initials in Capital letters. All proper nouns begin with their capital letters. The second type is the common nouns. It is a common name given to a group of places or people. Example: Paris is a very beautiful city. Here, city is a common noun. Common nouns do not begin with a capital letter. Collective nouns are a sub-category of common nouns. These are words that represent a group of things, objects, people, or places. Example: The herd of sheep blocked our way. Here, herd is a collective noun. As it is a sub-category of common nouns, these do not begin with a capital letter. Abstract nouns are words that are names for quality, action, or a state that is different from the object to which it belongs. These are formed by combining adjectives, verbs, and sometimes common nouns. Examples: Loyalty, goodness, obedience, slavery. The names of the things that are countable or measurable are known as countable nouns. These nouns have plural forms. Example: books, pencils, oranges, rings, shoes. The names of things that we cannot count are what we call as uncountable nouns. These names do not have plural forms. Example: Honesty, purity .