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What comes to mind when you hear the word ice cream? Do you feel the coldness in your mouth? Do you taste rich chocolate or creamy vanilla or fruity strawberry?

What comes to mind when you hear the word ice cream ?  Do you feel the coldness in your mouth?  Do you taste rich chocolate or creamy vanilla

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What comes to mind when you hear the word ice cream ?  Do you feel the coldness in your mouth?  Do you taste rich chocolate or creamy vanilla or fruity strawberry? . - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Concrete Nouns

What comes to mind when you hear the word ice cream?Do you feel the coldness in your mouth?Do you taste rich chocolate or creamy vanilla or fruity strawberry?

What about the word fire? Do you hear the crackle? Feel the warmth on your face? Words like flames and fire are concrete nouns. Lets explore this a little farther.

A Concrete noun is classified by its ability to reach the senses. Concrete nouns are something physical. If you can taste, touch, hear, smell or see an item the word is a concrete noun. Examples of concrete nouns are water, air or pizza.

Concrete Noun

The vast majority of nouns are concrete nouns. Take all animals and people for example. You can touch, feel, see, and hear them. You can do the same for objects. We take in with our eyes all the sights of places we visit.Concrete Nouns are exactly what they sound like. The are hard things that you can use your 5 senses to observe.

Concrete Nouns

Objects and substances that can be experienced through our senses are referred to as concrete nouns. That means we can touch, feel, smell, taste or hear them.

Think of the concrete blocks that make up the walls of this school. You can touch it, see it, feel it.Make a connection in your mind with the concrete block and concrete nouns.Memory Trick

I can drop a concrete block on my toe. If it is something I can drop on my toe it is concrete.

Names people, places, and things. Every noun can further be classified as common or proper. A common noun names general items.Go into the kitchen. What do you see? Refrigerator, magnet, stove, window, coffee maker, wallpaper, spatula, sink, plateall of these things are common nouns.Leave the house. Where can you go? Mall, restaurant, school, post office, backyard, beach, pet store, supermarket, gas stationall of these places are common nouns.Go to the mall. Who do you see? Teenager, grandmother, salesclerk, police officer, toddler, manager, window dresser, janitor, shoplifterall of these people are common nouns.The important thing to remember is that common nouns are general names. Thus, they are not capitalized unless they begin a sentence or are part of a title.

Common NounProper NounsA proper noun has two distinctive features: 1) It will name a specific item (usually one-of-a-kind).2) It will begin with a capital letter no matter where it occurs in a sentence.

Capital LettersWe always use a Capital Letter for the first letter of a proper noun (name). This includes names of people, places, companies, days of the week and months. For example:They like John. I live in England. She works for Sony. The last day in January is a Monday. We saw Twilight at the Mall of Georgia.

Common NounProper Nouncoffee shopStarbuckswaiterPetejeansLevissandwichBig MacchairLay-Z-BoyarenaGwinnett ArenacountryAustraliaLets CompareAbstract Nouns

Your five senses cannot detect this group of nouns.Bravery is an example of an abstract noun. You can see the knight, the castle, and the sword. But you cannot see bravery itself. Bravery has no color, size, shape, sound, odor, flavor, or texture; it has no quality that you can see, hear, smell, taste, or touch. Any noun that escapes your five senses is an abstract noun.

An abstract noun is a type of noun that refers to something a person cannot physically interact with. A noun is a person, place or thing. However, in many cases, the 'thing' might be an intangible concept. A noun that is abstract is an aspect, concept, idea, experience, state of being, trait, quality, feeling, or other entity that cannot be experienced with the five senses.

Abstract NounsCommon Abstract Nouns

Emotions/FeelingsLove Hate Anger Peace Pride SympathyStates/AttributesBravery Loyalty Honesty Integrity Compassion Charity Success Courage Deceit Skill Beauty Brilliance Pain MiseryIdeas/Concepts/IdealsBeliefs Dreams Justice Truth Faith Liberty Knowledge Thought Information Culture Trust Dedication

Good WritingGood writing balances ideas and facts, and it also balances abstract and concrete nouns. If the writing is too abstract, with too few concrete facts and details, it will be unconvincing and tiresome. If the writing is too concrete, devoid of ideas and emotions, it can seem pointless and dry.

Collective nouns, a special class, name groups composed of members (usually people or animals).Collective NounsCollective Noun examplesarmyaudienceboardcabinetclasscommitteecompanycorporationcouncildepartmentfacultyfamilyfirmgroupjurymajorityminoritynavypublicschoolsenatesocietyteamtroupe

Concrete Nouns Listhttp://www.writing.com/main/view_item/item_id/1757079-Concrete-Nouns-List