143 Noun phrases
143 Noun phrases
1 A noun phrase can be one word.
Whisky is expensive. (uncountable noun)
Planes take off from here. (plural noun)
They landed at Berlin. (name)
She alerted the pilot. (pronoun)
It can also be more than one word.
Someone was stealing the whisky.
A lot of planes take off from here.
Security guards set a trap.
2 In a noun phrase there can be determiners, quantifiers and modifiers, as well as a
noun.
a Determiners
These come before the noun.
a bomb the result this idea my bag
The determiners are the articles (a, the), demonstratives (this, that, these, those)
and Possessives (e.g. my, your).
b Quantifiers
These also come before the noun.
a lot of money two people every photo half the passengers
Quantifiers are a lot of, many, much, a few, every, each, all, most, both, half, some,
any, no etc. • 176
c Modifiers
A noun can be modified by an adjective or by another noun.
Adjective: small bottles the exact time
Noun: glass bottles an emergency landing
A prepositional phrase or adverb phrase can come after the noun and modify it.
the summer of 1978 the people inside • 148
d Overview
This is the basic structure of a noun phrase.
Quantifier Determiner Adjective Noun Noun Other
(+ of) modifier modifier modifiers
a bomb
a hot meal for two
the door
all these bottles here
a lot of empty bottles
a lot of her friends
enough exits
some nice soup dishes
each of the heavy glass doors of the building
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3 Here are some more details about the structure of a noun phrase.
a A quantifier can be more than one word.
a lot of money two hundred and fifty passengers
b We sometimes use both a quantifier and a determiner.
all that whisky both the doors
We can do this with all, both and half.
We can also use a determiner after a quantifier + of.
each of the doors a lot of my time one of these magazines
For more about quantifiers and determiners together, • 178(f b, 1c).
c Sometimes a quantifier comes after a determiner. We can use many, few or a
number after the, these, those or a possessive.
the many rooms of the house those few people left the three brothers
NOTE
We cannot use a lot of or a few in this pattern.
NOT the a lot of rooms of the house
d A possessive form (e.g. Susan's, the man's) functions as a determiner.
a lot of Susan's friends (Compare: a lot of her friends)
the man's seat all the passengers' meals
e There can be more than one adjective or noun modifier.
a lovely hot meal china soup dishes
For the order of adjectives, • 202.
f The modifier can be a gerund or participle.
Gerund: some cooking oil a flying lesson • 283(2)
Participle: a ticking clock some stolen bottles of whisky • 1 3 7
g After a noun we can use a clause as a modifier.
a plan to catch a thief
a clock hidden inside the drinks cabinet
the stewardess who was serving drinks
h Next, last and first, second, third etc come after a determiner, not before it.
your next job most of the second week this third anniversary
But they usually go before one, two, three etc.
my next two jobs the first six weeks
NOTE
a Compare these examples.
The first three prizes were £50, £25 and £10.
There were three first prizes, one for each age group.
b For another two jobs and two more jobs, • 180(3b).
i We can use an adverb before a quantifier or an adjective.
Adverb + quantifier •212(8)
almost all the time quite a lot of money very many bottles
Adverb + adjective •212(1)
a very expensive trap some really nice soup dishes
17 NOUNS AND NOUN PHRASES
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4 A noun phrase can be a subject, an object, a complement or an adverbial.
It can also be the object of a preposition.
Subject:
Object:
Complement:
Adverbial:
Prepositional object:
Security guards set a trap.
The stewardess alerted the pilot.
The cost of a bottle was 17 pence.
That day something unusual happened.
The passengers left in a hurry through fire exits.
144 Countable and uncountable nouns
1 Introduction
a Countable nouns can be singular or plural: book(s), hotel(s), boat(s), day(s), job(s),
mile(s), piece(s), pwblem(s), dream(s). Uncountable nouns are neither singular
nor plural: water, sugar, salt, money, music, electricity, happiness, excitement.
We use countable nouns for separate, individual things such as books and hotels,
things we can count. We use uncountable nouns for things that do not naturally
divide into separate units, such as water and sugar, things we cannot count.
b Many countable nouns are concrete: table(s), car(s), shoe(s). But some are abstract:
situation(s), idea(s). Many uncountable nouns are abstract: beauty, love,
psychology. But some are concrete: butter, plastic.
Many nouns can be either countable or uncountable. • (5)
c An uncountable noun takes a singular verb, and we use this/that and it.
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