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leyendo el
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comprendido.
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Escucha el audio
(escucha el audio más de una vez para familiarizarte con los términos que
se introducen y explican)
The
English language has an interesting way of classifying words. We
organize words by their function or purpose. These functions are parts
of speech. You might find that a noun acts like a verb, as with the word
impact. Once you would talk about something having an impact. This is
the noun form of impact. Now you can say you want to impact a decision
process. That is the verb form of impact.
You know that an adjective modifies, describing a quality of a noun. For
example, you drink a cup of hot tea. The adjective is hot and the noun
is tea. What about lemon tea? Lemon is a noun, isn’t it? Why is it
modifying tea?
English often uses nouns as adjectives - to modify other nouns. For
example, a car that people drive in races is a race car. A car with
extra power or speed is a sports car. Nouns that modify other nouns are
called adjectival nouns or noun modifiers. For our purposes, they are
called attributive nouns. So we will use that term.
Did you notice something unusual about the expressions with the noun car?
A car used to race other cars is a race car. Both nouns are singular. A
car that has power and speed is a sports car. Why is the first noun,
sports, plural? A search of the Internet shows us that people started
using this phrase back in 1914. Cars were a new thing then.
There is no rule about whether the attributive noun is singular or
plural. Most of the time it is singular. But if the combination of nouns
includes a plural noun, it usually stays that way. The result is phrases
like ladies room – not lady room, for a room meant for women and girls,
and bean soup but not beans soup for a soup made of beans.
Some grammar experts think that English speakers are using more plural
nouns in this way. We have arms race, benefits office, and women leaders.
At times, a singular noun changes the meaning. An arts degree recognizes
completion of a study program at a college or university in the
humanities (or liberal arts). But an art degree is a degree in the fine
arts.
When writing these attributive nouns in English, learners sometimes
wonder about whether to use an apostrophe to show possession. Is it a
ladies’ room? No, it is a ladies room. Attributive nouns do not need the
apostrophe. So we write Veterans Day in American English and not
Veteran’s Day or Veterans’ Day. That means the day is in honor of
military veterans, not owned by veterans.
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