Level: beginner
Names of people, places and organisations are called proper nouns. We spell proper nouns with a capital letter:
Muhammad Ali | Birmingham | China | Oxford University | the United Nations |
We use capital letters for festivals:
Christmas | Deepavali | Easter | Ramadan | Thanksgiving |
We use capital letters for people's titles:
I was talking to Doctor Wilson recently.
Everything depends on President Obama.
When we give the names of books, films, plays and paintings, we use capital letters for the nouns, adjectives and verbs in the name:
I have been reading The Old Man and the Sea.
Beatrix Potter wrote The Tale of Peter Rabbit.
You can see the Mona Lisa in the Louvre.
Level: intermediate
Sometimes we use a person's name to refer to something they have created:
Recently a Van Gogh was sold for 15 million dollars.
We were listening to Mozart.
I'm reading an Agatha Christie.
- Proper nouns
sir i have questions.
the name of days == monday , sunday, /etc...
the name of months == june, may ,/etc...
the name of films == i robot, 300, /etc...
the name of organisations == UN, Apple, coca cola/etc......
the name of sports == football,Volleyball /etc....
and democracy/communism/International Workers' Day/thanksgiving day are proper noun or abstract noun.
if you have answer for please explain detail.
i am not clear about that.
sirs
Hello zwe yan naing 2009,
The names of days, months, holidays (e.g. International Workers' Day and Thanksgiving) and organisations are definitely proper nouns. I wouldn't say that the names of sports or ideologies are proper nouns, but I might be wrong about that.
Feel free to have a look at the Wikipedia entry on Proper nouns and let us know if you have any further questions.
Best wishes,
Kirk
LearnEnglish team
I try to read but this Wikipedia article is so complex for me. so I to want know
The names of days, months, holidays and organisations are why proper noun
these are not a thing of name OR a place of name OR a person of name.
that have to be abstract noun?
Hello zwe yan naing,
Grammar isn't logical all the time, so in the end what a student of a language must do is learn how the language works. In this case, it might help to think of organisations as a kind of person. They are composed of people and are like a large person in a sense, similar to a country. (Countries are also capitalised.)
As for days, months and holidays, perhaps it helps to know that some days are named after ancient gods -- for example, Friday is named after a goddess often known as Freya. This is not true of all days, but perhaps it helps you remember that days are proper nouns.
Hope this helps you.
Best wishes,
Kirk
LearnEnglish team
hello sir,
why is some word we put it in between (_).?
Hello g-ssan,
Many names have two or more words in them. For example, 'Agatha' is a given name and 'Christie' is that author's surname (family name). 'Van Gogh', on the other hand, is a family name that has two words in it; it comes from the Dutch language, so I'm afraid I can't explain much about that!
Is that what you were asking about?
All the best,
Kirk
The LearnEnglish Team
sir ,
i mean word like self _taught why we but it in between (_)؟
Hello g-ssan,
Ah – you mean a hyphen. This is a different punctuation mark:
- hyphens are used within words as a way of joining two words together.
– dashes are longer and are used between words to show a pause or break.
_ underscores are used in email addresses and similar forms where spaces are not usually possible
You can read about hyphenation in English here:
https://dictionary.cambridge.org/grammar/british-grammar/hyphens
Peter
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello Sourav Bhatia,
A 'run' is discrete in a way that 'running' is not. For example, many people who run for exercise 'go on a run' several times a week. 'a run' is usually a specific amount of time or a specific route they take.
'running', on the other hand, is the activity of running in general. For example, if we speak about different kinds of exercise someone likes, we'd say 'running'.
Hope this helps.
All the best,
Kirk
The LearnEnglish Team
Hi Samin,
It's a collective noun! And box by itself is a common noun.
Best wishes,
Jonathan
The LearnEnglish Team
Hi Samin,
It's a common noun too. :)
Jonathan
The LearnEnglish Team
Hi knowman,
I'm not sure why the page didn't have a comments section. I've added one now so you can post your question.
Peter
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello Kapil Kabir,
I'm afraid I don't quite understand your question. We use pronouns to avoid having to repeat a noun or noun phrase multiple times, but it must refer to something which is already known and identified. Beyond that, I'm not sure what you mean by differences in use.
Peter
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello Kapil Kabir,
We capitalise words like king when we are using them in place of a name to refer to a particular person and not just to anyone who has that title. Thus we would write:
Thus, a word like king can be a proper noun but can also be a regular noun.
It is possible to use names as plurals, but they are always capitalised:
Your second example is not correct because Lucy should be plural: Lucys.
Peter
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello MBenham,
When we talk about the item of clothing, 'jeans' is always plural.
In British English, there is no singular form. To talk about the material, we use the word 'denim'.
A search for 'jean' in the Cambridge Dictionary gives no entry:
https://dictionary.cambridge.org/spellcheck/english/?q=jean
In other dialects of English, it may be that there is a use of the singular form, but it is certainly not common.
Peter
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello oyc,
Yes, they are and that is why they are capitalised. The figure of speech here is metonymy, which means describing a thing or concept by the name of something closely associated with that thing or concept. For example, in informal language a pejorative term for 'business people' is 'suits':
When the thing referred to is a proper noun, it retains its capitalisation:
Here, 'the White House' means 'the President'.
'Silicon Vally' means 'the tech/computer industry'
Peter
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello Ysato201602
Yes, some streets are named 'High Street', but in British English, the 'high street' also refers to a street or area where the most important or famous shops are located.
Both of your sentences are correct (though we usually say 'the high street') and mean mostly the same thing. The difference is that there are many busy streets in a city, but only one high street.
All the best
Kirk
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello AminulIslam.,
Proper nouns are names of people or institutions of some kind. They begin with capital letters. For example:
I understand that you have a task from somewhere else which asks you to categorise the items you listed in your previous post but I think this is probably a set of categories created by the authors of the task rather than one widely recognised in linguistic study. I'm afraid we can't help you with the task.
Peter
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello AminulIslam.,
You have a mixture of nouns and adjectives there.
You can check the meaning of each item in an online dictionary:
Cambridge
Oxford
Merriam-Webster
Peter
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello Ahmed Imam,
The phrase 'at my school' defines a particular group of teachers, so I think 'the' is likely:
The teachers at my school are very clever.
It would be possible to use no article if you wanted to make a general statement about teachers at your school in order to contrast a particular group of them. For example:
Teachers at my school are generally very clever. However, the ones who arrived this year are not clever at all!
Peter
The LearnEnglish Team