Слайд 1 The noun
a word expressing substance in
the widest sense of the word
Nouns
Proper Common
(London, John, Monday, May)
Class Nouns of Collective Abstract
(dog, table) material (family) (idea)
(snow, iron)
Genders of nouns
Masculine
Feminine Neutral
he she it
(men, boys, (women, girls, (things, babies,
animals when animals when animals when
we know their we know their we don’t know
sex) sex, countries, their sex)
ships, vehicles
when regarded with affection)
Слайд 4
Most nouns describing people have the
same form whether they are male or female (teacher, student).
Some nouns have different forms:
actor – actress groom – bride
waiter – waitress host – hostess
widower – widow steward – stewardess
prince – princess hero – heroine
duke – duchess king – queen
monk – nun heir - heiress
Слайд 5Noun-forming suffixes:
-er, -or, -ar, -est, -ness, -ism, -ess, -(a)ion, -tion,
-sion,
-hood, -dom, -ship, -ment, -ance, -ence, -ty, -ity, -ure,
-age,
-y, -ee, -ian, -al, -sis, -cy
The most common prefixes:
re-, co-, dis-, mis-, over-, under-, sub-, inter-
Compound nouns:
one word (classroom), two words (CD player), hyphen (game-tester)
Nouns
Countable
Uncountable
denote things that denote things we
can be counted can’t count
can take singular and always take singular
plural verbs; verbs;
go with –a,-an,-my/his/ don’t go with –a,-an,
her/your/its/our/their, one/two…, these/
-this/these/that/those those
Слайд 7We use –a, -an, one/two… with such uncountables as tea,
coffee, etc.
when we order smth. in a restaurant, etc.
Слайд 8Some problems with uncountables
Some nouns are uncountable in
English but countable in Russian:
advice (совет), news
(новости), money (деньги), information (сведения), progress (успех), travel (путешествие), trouble (проблема), hair (волосы), success (успех), toast (гренки), applause (аплодисменты), knowledge (знания), evidence (признак, свидетельство),spaghetti (спагетти), failure (неудача), fruit (фрукты), etc.
Слайд 9Some problems with uncountables
Some nouns can be used
as countable or uncountable with a difference in meaning:
a glass(стакан), glasses(очки), a paper(газета), papers(документы), a hair(волосина),
an iron(утюг), a wood(лес), times(разы), experiences(события), works(произведения), a chicken ( the animal), a toast (тост), a help (помощник), a gossip (сплетник), cheeses/fruits and other words denoting different sorts of a given material or food, etc.
Слайд 10Some problems with uncountables
Many uncountable nouns can be
made countable by adding a partitive:
a piece
of, a bottle of, a sheet of, a box of, a slice of, a loaf of, a bit of, a kilo of, a tube of, a plate of, etc.
Always look it up in the dictionary!
Слайд 11Nouns are made plural by adding:
-s to the noun
-es to
nouns ending in –s, -ss, -x, -ch, -sh, -z
-ies to
nouns ending in consonant + y
-es to nouns ending in consonant + o ( But –s if they are abbreviations (photos, kilos, autos, etc.), musical instruments (pianos), proper nouns (Eskimos). Some nouns ending in –o can take either –s or –es ( buffalo, mosquito, volcano, tornado, zero, etc.)
-ves to some nouns ending in –f/-fe (calves, halves, knives, leaves, selves, thieves, wolves, wives, etc.) But: beliefs, chiefs, cliffs, handkerchiefs, scarfs/scarves, hoofs/hooves (копыто), roofs, safes)
Greek or Latin suffixes ( basis- bases, crisis- crises, terminus- termini (конечная станция), criterion- criteria, phenomenon- phenomena, stimulus- stimuli, datum- data (данные, база), medium- media (средство) , formula- formulae, index- indices, antenna- antennae, etc.)
Слайд 12Compound nouns usually form their plural by adding –s/-es to
the second noun. But to the first noun if it
is followed by a preposition ( mothers-in-law, passers-by). At the end of the compound if it doesn’t include any nouns (letdowns).
Irregular plurals: man- men (but: Walkmans), woman- women, foot- feet, tooth- teeth, mouse- mice, louse- lice, child- children, goose- geese, sheep- sheep, deer- deer, fish- fish, trout- trout (форель), cod- cod (треска), salmon- salmon (лосось), ox- oxen, spacecraft- spacecraft, aircraft- aircraft, hovercraft- hovercraft, means- means, species- species, swine- swine, dozen- dozen ( but: in dozens), score- score – счет, задолженность (but: scores of people - множество), series – series, rendezvous- rendezvous.
Слайд 13Some problems with verb forms
We use singular verb forms with:
nouns which refer to school subjects (maths, politics), sports (athletics),
games (billiards, dominoes, darts, draughts [drɑːfts] (шашки)), illnesses (measles (корь), mumps (свинка)); when we talk about an amount of money, a time period, weight, distance, etc. ( Five thousand pounds was donated to build a new hospital wing. Two weeks isn’t long to wait. Ten miles is a long way to ride.); with group nouns when we mean the group as a unit ( jury, family, team, group, crew (команда, экипаж), crowd, class, audience, committee, council (совет), army, club, press, government, company, staff (штат), etc.)
Слайд 14Some problems with verb forms
We use plural verb forms with:
nouns which refer to objects that consist of two parts
( trousers, binoculars, shorts, pyjamas, tights, glasses, earrings, scissors['sɪzəz] (ножницы), compasses (циркуль), scales (весы), tongs (щипцы, клещи), jeans, spectacles, etc.); nouns such as: clothes, police, stairs, looks, surroundings (окрестности, окружение), outskirts (окраина), premises (недвижимость), earnings (заработок, прибыль), wages, cattle (скот), poultry (птица), congratulations, thanks, riches, goods (товары), contents (содержание), oats (овес), potatoes, carrots, onions ( but: a potato/a carrot/ an onion); group nouns when we mean the individuals.
These nouns are plural in Russian but both singular and plural in English: watch- watches, clock- clocks, gate- gates, sledge- sledges, vacation- vacations
( Our summer vacation lasts 2 months. We have 2 vacations a year.)
Слайд 15The category of case
We show possession in English
with the genitive form of a noun. This means we
normally use ‘s (апостроф + s) or ’ (апостроф без s) for people and some living creatures. ( Frank’s car; a boy’s cat; Doris’s address, an actress’s career, children’s games, my father-in-law’s house, the girls’ uniforms).
We use ‘s and ‘ with some non-living things: time phrases ( a day’s work, two hours’ journey), the names of countries/ cities/ships ( Moscow’s theaters), nouns expressing space/ weight/organization ( the river’s edge, the company’s success), with the nouns world/ country/city/ship (world’s best museums) .
The genitive is used in some set expressions and fixed phrases: for Heaven’s sake (ради Бога), for God’s sake, at one’s wit’s end (стать в тупик), to a hair’s breadth (точь-в-точь), by a hair’s breadth (на волоске от), at a stone’s through, the earth’s surface, journey’s end, etc.