Difference between revisions of "Noun (Latin nomen)"
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===Other languages=== | ===Other languages=== | ||
− | German [[Nomen]] | + | *German [[Nomen]] |
− | Russian [[имя]] | + | *Russian [[имя]] |
{{dc}} | {{dc}} | ||
[[Category:Syntax]] | [[Category:Syntax]] | ||
[[Category:Part of speech]] | [[Category:Part of speech]] |
Revision as of 23:01, 8 January 2008
In older Western grammar based on the Latin tradition, the term noun is used for a word class that inflects for case, i.e. (in Latin and similar Indo-European languages) a class comprising both nouns and adjectives.
Comments
The category of nomen is subclassified into the following subtypes: nomen substantivum, nomen adjectivum, nomen numerale etc. This terminology is still current in Russian (imja), Hebrew (toʔar) and other European languages.
Polysemy
- In English, noun more often refers to a word class that prototypically expresses things: see noun.
Synonyms
Origin
Latin nomen