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In this video you will get: Part 1: Nouns Definition and Identification A noun is the name of a person, place, animal, thing, feeling, or idea. It is important to distinguish nouns from adjectives; qualities themselves (like "brave") are not nouns, though the abstract idea (like "bravery") is. Abstract Nouns: These represent ideas or feelings and often end in suffixes like "-ness" (e.g., happiness, kindness). Types of Nouns Collective Nouns: These refer to groups of individuals or things. Examples: A team of players, a school of fish, a herd of cattle, a litter of puppies, a brood of chicks, a pride of lions, or a family. Common Nouns: These refer to a general class of people or objects (e.g., "boy" or "city"), whereas Proper Nouns refer to specific names (e.g., "Taj Mahal"). Countable vs. Uncountable: * Countable nouns can be quantified with numbers. Uncountable nouns represent substances or concepts that cannot be counted individually (e.g., water, air, advice). Part 2: Pronouns Definition A pronoun is a word used in place of a noun to avoid repetition. The "PP RED ID RRI" Mnemonic To remember the ten types of pronouns, use this mnemonic: Personal (I, you, he, she) Possessive (mine, yours, theirs) Reflexive (myself, ourselves—subject and object are the same) Emphatic (himself, themselves—used for emphasis) Demonstrative (this, that, these, those) Indefinite (anyone, someone, nobody) Distributive (each, either, neither) Reciprocal (each other, one another) Relative (who, which, that—connects clauses) Interrogative (who, what, which—used for questions) Examples in Context Emphatic: In "He himself did it," himself emphasizes the subject. Demonstrative: "That is my house." Relative: "The man who called yesterday is here." Mixed Sentence: In the question "What is your father?", What is an Interrogative pronoun and your is a Possessive pronoun.