What Does A Noun Do in A Sentence?
What Does A Noun Do in A Sentence?
It acts as the subject of a sentence that performs the action of the verb. The subject has to be
a noun. It cannot be a verb, an adverb, an adjective or any other part of speech. Nouns are
basic to sentence structure because they, along with pronouns, provide the subject of the
sentence. In addition, a noun functions as a direct object of a verb, an indirect object of a
verb, object of a preposition, or a complement.
(1) Noun as subject of verb
The subject (in bold) can be a person, place, thing or idea. It performs an act or shows a
state of being as expressed by the verb. The subject is easily recognized as it usually comes
at the beginning of a sentence and is followed by a verb.
Examples:
o The man stepped on my toes.
o The car smashed into a wall.
o Both of them fell down the stairs.
o I accidentally hit my head on the bookshelf.
o He fed the monkeys bananas.
o The mother was cooking her family a seafood dinner.
o Jack sent a letter to his parents.
o She poured drinks for the boys.
A noun must be in the singular form when used as an adjective as shown above. There are,
however, some exceptions: sports club, a goods train, a sales conference.
Nouns acting as adjectives are combined with the nouns that they modify to form a single
word.
o She saw a dark figure waving to her from her doorway.
o There is a layer of fine dust on your bookcase.
o In the farmhouse, the hoots of owls were the only things they heard.
o Each night he set several mousetraps around the house and in the garage.
o He brought along his toothpaste but forgot his toothbrush.