A noun is typically introduced by determiners, and may be followed by adjectives and prepositional phrases, producing a noun phrase. Typical nouns denote physical objects such as people, places, and things, but nouns can also denote more abstract concepts that are grammatically similar.
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rdfs:label
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rdfs:comment
| - A noun is typically introduced by determiners, and may be followed by adjectives and prepositional phrases, producing a noun phrase. Typical nouns denote physical objects such as people, places, and things, but nouns can also denote more abstract concepts that are grammatically similar.
- Nouns (名詞) do not take suffixes in Japanese. They don't often take prefixes either. Rather, they are followed by postpositions (like prepositions e.g. to, for, with, against, in, on, at, by, near, around, etc., but after the noun rather than before). They don't change when they are plural e.g. dog and dogs are both inu in Japanese.
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dcterms:subject
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dbkwik:lfn/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
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abstract
| - A noun is typically introduced by determiners, and may be followed by adjectives and prepositional phrases, producing a noun phrase. Typical nouns denote physical objects such as people, places, and things, but nouns can also denote more abstract concepts that are grammatically similar.
- Nouns (名詞) do not take suffixes in Japanese. They don't often take prefixes either. Rather, they are followed by postpositions (like prepositions e.g. to, for, with, against, in, on, at, by, near, around, etc., but after the noun rather than before). They don't change when they are plural e.g. dog and dogs are both inu in Japanese.
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