Generic nouns are usually people's names, places, and things. Example: mother, tiger, city, table
A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing. Examples: Curran, India, Jasmine, Antarctica, Greenland, Alps
An earthquake struck in Italy on Monday. (Earthquake - general noun; Italian and Monday - proper noun)
Rada bought a bicycle for his brother. (Rada - proper noun, bicycle and brother - general noun)
4. India is the seventh largest country in the world. (Indian - proper nouns; country and world - general noun)
My sister Jane wants to become a flight attendant. (Jane - proper noun; sister and cabin attendant - general noun)
7. The United States is one of the world's most advanced countries. (America - proper noun; country and world - general noun)
Agra is on the banks of the Yamuna River. (Agra and Yamuna - proper nouns; banks and rivers - general nouns)
The coach was angry when the boy lost the championship. (Coach, boys, champion - general noun)
10. The Titanic was the name of the ship sunk on the first trip. (Titanic - proper noun; ship, name and travel - general noun)
There are common nouns and proper nouns. A general noun refers to a person, a place, a thing, but it does not refer to a specific person, place, thing. For example, animals, sunshine, and happiness. A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing; it usually starts in capital letters: Abram Lincoln, Argentina, and World War I are proper nouns. An aggregate noun is a noun that refers to a group of people or things, such as flocks or squads. Whether the verb of an aggregate noun is singular or plural may not be obvious. In the United States, companies, groups, groups, public names, class names, companies, teams, etc. are regarded as singular, but they are usually considered plural in the UK. "VS. (UK)" team has been doing well this season. "
Nouns are generally classified into two categories, proper nouns and general nouns. A proper noun refers to a specific person, place, or thing that usually starts with capital letters. Shakespeare, Mexico, Pentagon. General nouns are ordinary people, places, things, teachers, classrooms, smartphones. Common nouns of plurals are called one or group. (Only in special cases, proper nouns are plural, there are a lot of spring fields in the US Oh no, Smith is coming to eat again.
English nouns change only by quantity and possession. New nouns can be formed by derivation or synthesis. They are semantically divided into proper nouns (nouns) and general nouns. A general noun is divided into a proper noun and an abstract noun, and it is divided into a noun grammatically counted and a number of nouns. Ownership can be represented by closed closure (also traditionally called ethnographic suffix) or preposition. Historically, ownership of -s is used for animated nouns and ownership is used for inanimate nouns. Today, this distinction is not clear, and many speakers are using inanimate objects. In orthogonality, possessions are separated from noun roots by apostrophe.