Two quizzes based on a 'bank' of more than 200 abstract nouns. View by base word type or go for a random selection.
Traditional grammar divides nouns into:
- Proper nouns - the names of people, organisations, products and places etc. They always begin with a capital letter
Peter Davidson, the United Nations, Blogger, Poland etc
- Common nouns - everything else
butter, dogs, love, travel etc
We can further divide common nouns into:
- Concrete nouns - these describe things that can be experienced with at least one of the five senses, you can see them, hear them, smell them, taste them, and/or feel them.
- Abstract nouns - these describe things that cannot be detected with the senses: things like emotions, ideals and ideas.
Abstract nouns can be both countable and uncountable, but most of the ones in this post are uncountable. Many abstract nouns are formed from other words - adjectives, verbs and nouns - usually by adding a suffix to them, and that's what we'll be looking at here.
Occasionally two different abstract nouns can be made from the same base word. This is the case with:
- abstain > abstinence, abstention
- admit > admission, admittance
- deceive > deception, deceit
- live > life, livelihood
- obey > obedience, obeyance
- proceed > process, procedure
- progress > progress, progression
In these cases I've only listed the first.
This post has three sections:
- Matching game
- Gapfill exercise
- Reference section
You can choose between different classes of base word, and between the most common abstract nouns, as listed in the Oxford 3000™ (see link below) or all the abstract nouns in my list. In the quizzes, the base words can be shown alphabetically (default) or randomised.
Your exercise will appear here
Random Idea English
http://random-idea-english.blogspot.com
Random Idea English
http://random-idea-english.blogspot.com
Links
More Words.com
This
website is really a word finder for crosswords, Scrabble® etc, but has some useful lists of the most common words with specified endings:
Belum ada tanggapan untuk "Forming abstract nouns using suffixes"
Posting Komentar