However, too much nouning makes you sound bureaucratic, immature, and verbally challenged. Top executives convert far fewer nouns into verbs than do workers at lower levels.
A word that can be used to refer to a person, animal, place, thing, event, substance, quality, or idea; one of the basic parts of speech in many languages, including English
A noun is any word that can form the head word in a noun phrase or be the subject or object of a verb Semantically speaking, a noun is any word that 'labels' or 'names' a person, thing or idea There are several types of noun: common noun (e g computer, sandwich, cats), proper noun (proper nouns are names for individual nouns, e g Coke, London, Simon), abstract noun (abstract nouns are 'ideas', e g death, hunger, beauty), concrete nouns (concrete nouns are solid objects in the real or imaginary world, e g bread, butter, clock) collective nouns (collective nouns name groups of individual or things, e g parliament, audience; collective nouns are often treated as if they were singular, e g 'The choir is singing well '), mass (or non-count) nouns (mass nouns exist as an undifferentiated mass, e g card, beer, milk, cake), and count nouns (count nouns exits as countable items, e g bottle, pencil)
A noun is a word such as `car', `love', or `Anne' which is used to refer to a person or thing. see also collective noun, count noun, mass noun, proper noun, singular noun, uncount noun. a word or group of words that represent a person (such as 'Michael', 'teacher' or 'police officer'), a place (such as 'France' or 'school'), a thing or activity (such as 'coffee' or 'football'), or a quality or idea (such as 'danger' or 'happiness'). Nouns can be used as the subject or object of a verb (as in 'The teacher arrived' or 'We like the teacher') or as the object of a preposition (as in 'good at football'). common noun, count noun, proper noun (from nom, from nomen; NOMINAL)
traditionally defined as the name of a person, a place or a thing - e g 'book' The suffix 's' is often added to nouns to indicate a plural (more than one) Some nouns do not normally take a plural form - e g, money, sheep
A word used as the designation or appellation of a creature or thing, existing in fact or in thought; a substantive