Words are divided into classes, according to the
different
purposes which they answer in speech. There are eight classes
of words, or, as they are commonly called, PARTS of SPEECH.
These are-
1. Noun.
2. Adjective, to which the Articles belong.
3.
Pronoun.
4. Verb.
5. Adverb.
6. Preposition.
7.
Conjunction.
8. Interjection.
The Noun.
A NOUN is a word which is the name
of something. There
are two kinds of nouns: Proper Nouns and Common Nouns.
PROPER NOUNS are such as denote
only one person or
thing of a kind : Adam, Noah, Alexander, William the Conqueror;
Thames, Avon; Victory, City of Glasgow (names of ships) ; Excalibur
(name of the fabulous sword of King Arthur).
Note. 1. The same proper name may be given to a
number
of individuals. Thus there are many Johns, "Williams,
&c.; several rivers called Avon; and more than one town
named Boston. Still these names are strictly Proper Nouns,
since they have been in each case separately given, and
do not belong to all objects of the same kind.
Note. 2. Proper Names are sometimes used to denote a
class
or group: as, the Caesars; the family of the Scipios; the
Howards : meaning all those bearing the same proper name.
Or the name of a well-known individual may be applied to
others possessing similar features: as, the modern Solon;
the infant Saphos". In such cases the Proper Name is
used as a Common one. Many Common Nouns have in this way
been formed from Proper Nouns: epicure from Epicure
or Epicurus, the philosopher; Academy, from a gymnasium
at Athens so named.
COMMON NOUNS: -All nouns which are
not Proper are
Common. They denote the same kind of thing under whatever circumstances
it may be found: man, city, river, ship; air, water, gold,
iron; beauty, truth, time, space.
Three kinds of Common Nouns require to be specially
noted:
Collective Nouns or Nouns of Multitude, Abstract Nouns, and
Names of Materials.
(1) Collective Nouns
-A Collective Noun denotes
a number of persons or things forming one body: a crowd
of persons ; a group of states or stars; a committee, a jury,
a parliament; Her Majesty's Government; the Ministry.
Note. 1. Collective Nouns are sometimes used so as
to refer to the individuals composing the group rather
than to the group itself. Thus we say, the crowd (that
is, (the people in the crowd) were noisy , the jury
(that is, the men. composing the jury) were not agreed.
Note. 2. Collective Nouns are Neuter, although
they
denote an aggregate of persons male or female: army,
mob.
(2) Abstract Nouns
.-Abstract Nouns are the
names not of objects but of ideas.
The following kinds of Abstract Nouns may be
enumerated -
1.
Names of qualities: whiteness, blackness, 'bitterness, 'height,
depth, 'breadth, length, wisdom, foolishness, stupidity.
2.
Names of states or conditions of things: life, death, time,
space, eternity, sovereignty, reign, regency, friendship,
leadership, orphancy, widowhood, minority.
3. Names of passions
and powers of the mind: love, jealousy, hatred, memory,
imagination.
4. Names of actions or processes: reading,
writing, multiplication, justification, punishment, coronation,
abdication.
5. Names of arts and sciences: poetry, sculpture,
astronomy, chemistry, ecology.
Note. The word abstract is derived from the Latin
word "abstractus" (abstraho), drawn off; implying that
a quality or state is thought of by itself, and detached
from an object. Thus when we speak of the size of a
globe, attention is directed to its size only, without
regard to the colour, weight, or material of the globe.