Nouns are words which refer to people, places or things. We can divide them into two types – common nouns and proper nouns.
Common nouns are generic nouns. They name people, places, things or ideas that are not specific and not unique.
Examples of common nouns include:
We don’t usually write them with a capital letter, unless they come at the beginning of a sentence:
Proper nouns are names for unique people, places or things and we always write them with a capital letter:
Examples of proper nouns include:
Proper nouns include:
a) The names of people, places or institutions:
b) The names of the days of the week, months of the year and public holidays:
(But not seasons: ‘summer’ not ‘Summer’.)
c) The names of nationalities and languages:
d) The names of newspapers, magazines and the titles of books and movies:
Note: When the title has several words, we often write all the important words in capital letters.
Take care with:
Note that proper nouns are generally used without articles. – Agatha Christie wrote many books. – Let’s go to San Francisco. – He never goes anywhere without Sarah. However, there are several categories that are used with the definite article ‘the’. |
Watch this video from Learn English from KT explaining the difference between common and proper nouns and some capitalization rules:
See also:
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