Difference between revisions of "Language/English/Grammar/Abstract-nouns-and-concrete-nouns"

From Polyglot Club WIKI
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Created page with "Nouns can be abstract or concrete. Concrete nouns are tangible and you can experience them with your five senses. Abstract nouns refer to intangible things, like actions, feel...")
 
m (Quick edit)
 
(5 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
Nouns can be abstract or concrete. Concrete nouns are tangible and you can experience them with your five senses. Abstract nouns refer to intangible things, like actions, feelings, ideals, concepts, and qualities.
[[File:English-Language-PolyglotClub.jpg|thumb]]
Nouns can be '''abstract''' or '''concrete'''. Concrete nouns are tangible and you can experience them with your 5 senses. Abstract nouns refer to intangible things, like actions, feelings, ideals, concepts, and qualities.
 
<span link>Once you've mastered this lesson, take a look at these related pages:</span> [[Language/English/Grammar/Contractions|Contractions]], [[Language/English/Grammar/Irregular-Verbs|Irregular Verbs]], [[Language/English/Grammar/Adverbs-of-Degree|Adverbs of Degree]] & [[Language/English/Grammar/Collocations-with-do|Collocations with do]].
__TOC__
 
==Video - What is an Abstract Noun?==
<youtube>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=napjJd6U4OU</youtube>
 
==Video - What is a Concrete Noun?==
<youtube>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EusCPgvmIVQ</youtube>
 
==Videos==
 
===Nouns - Concrete and Abstract | English Grammar & Composition ...===
<youtube>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mOQAOVqJBZQ</youtube>
 
===Nouns - Abstract and Concrete | English Grammar - YouTube===
<youtube>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xL5mxVrR06E</youtube>
 
==Other Lessons==
* [[Language/English/Grammar/When-use-If-or-Whether|When use If or Whether]]
* [[Language/English/Grammar/Adverbs-of-Time|Adverbs of Time]]
* [[Language/English/Grammar/Since-and-For|Since and For]]
* [[Language/English/Grammar/Negations|Negations]]
* [[Language/English/Grammar/Homophones|Homophones]]
* [[Language/English/Grammar/The-Hyphen-and-The-Dash-(Part-2)|The Hyphen and The Dash (Part 2)]]
* [[Language/English/Grammar/After-all|After all]]
* [[Language/English/Grammar/On:-place|On: place]]
* [[Language/English/Grammar/Gender|Gender]]
* [[Language/English/Grammar/Present-Tense|Present Tense]]
* [[Language/English/Grammar/Tenses|Tenses]]
* [[Language/English/Grammar/Verbosity-or-Circumlocution|Verbosity or Circumlocution]]
* [[Language/English/Grammar/Possible-Positions-of-Adverbs-in-a-Sentence|Possible Positions of Adverbs in a Sentence]]
* [[Language/English/Grammar/I-have-been-living-or-I-have-lived|I have been living or I have lived]]
* [[Language/English/Grammar/Definite-Article|Definite Article]]
<span links></span>

Latest revision as of 14:01, 27 March 2023

English-Language-PolyglotClub.jpg

Nouns can be abstract or concrete. Concrete nouns are tangible and you can experience them with your 5 senses. Abstract nouns refer to intangible things, like actions, feelings, ideals, concepts, and qualities.

Once you've mastered this lesson, take a look at these related pages: Contractions, Irregular Verbs, Adverbs of Degree & Collocations with do.

Video - What is an Abstract Noun?[edit | edit source]

Video - What is a Concrete Noun?[edit | edit source]

Videos[edit | edit source]

Nouns - Concrete and Abstract | English Grammar & Composition ...[edit | edit source]

Nouns - Abstract and Concrete | English Grammar - YouTube[edit | edit source]

Other Lessons[edit | edit source]