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The Concrete Noun

Recognize a concrete noun when you find one.

Nouns name people, places, and things. One class of nouns is concrete. You can experience this group of nouns with your five senses: you see them, hear them, smell them, taste them, and feel them.

See! Hear! Smell! Taste! Touch!
Can see Can hear Can smell Can taste Can touch

Read this example:

Reliable, Diane's beagle, licked strawberry ice cream off her chin.

Ice cream, for example, is a concrete noun. You can see the pink. You can taste the berry flavor. You can feel your tongue growing numb from the cold. Any noun that you can experience with at least one of your five senses is a concrete noun.

Do not confuse a concrete noun with an abstract noun.

Not all nouns are concrete. A second class of nouns is abstract. You cannot experience abstract nouns with your senses.

Read this example:

Diane pushed Reliable off her lap to register her disapproval.

Disapproval is an example of an abstract noun. What color is disapproval? You do not know because you cannot see it. What texture is disapproval? Who knows? You cannot touch it. What flavor is disapproval? No clue! You cannot taste it! Does it make a sound? Of course not! Does it smell? Not a bit!

Review this chart contrasting concrete and abstract nouns:

Concrete Nouns Abstract Nouns
student
fire fighter
pencil
computer
road
toddler
money
yardstick
egg
sponge
intelligence
bravery
eloquence
convenience
adventure
boisterousness
freedom
precision
potential
cleanliness

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