Proper noun  

From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
Revision as of 18:49, 19 September 2022
Jahsonic (Talk | contribs)
(Proper and common nouns moved to Proper noun)
← Previous diff
Revision as of 18:56, 19 September 2022
Jahsonic (Talk | contribs)

Next diff →
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Template}} {{Template}}
-A '''proper noun''' is a [[noun]] that in its primary application refers to a unique entity, such as ''[[London]]'', ''[[Jupiter]]'', ''[[Sarah]]'', or ''[[Microsoft]]'', as distinguished from a '''common noun''', which usually refers to a [[Class (philosophy)|class]] of entities (''city, planet, person, corporation''), or non-unique instances of a certain class (a ''city'', another ''planet'', these ''persons'', our ''corporation'').+ 
 +A '''proper noun''' is a [[noun]] that identifies a single entity and is used to refer to that entity (''[[Africa]]'', ''[[Jupiter]]'', ''[[Sarah (given name)|Sarah]]'', ''[[Microsoft]])'' as distinguished from a '''common noun''', which is a noun that refers to a [[Class (philosophy)|class]] of entities (''continent, planet, person, corporation'') and may be used when referring to instances of a specific class (a ''continent'', another ''planet'', these ''persons'', our ''corporation'').{{sfn|Lester|Beason|2005|p=4}}{{sfn|Anderson|2007|pp=3–5}}{{sfn|Pie|Gaynor|1954|p=177}}{{sfn|Neufeldt|1991|p=1078}} Some proper nouns occur in plural form (optionally or exclusively), and then they refer to ''groups'' of entities considered as unique (the ''Hendersons'', the ''[[Everglades]]'', ''the [[Azores]]'', the ''[[Pleiades (Greek mythology)|Pleiades]]''). Proper nouns can also occur in secondary applications, for example modifying nouns (the ''Mozart'' experience; his ''Azores'' adventure), or in the role of common nouns (he's no ''Pavarotti''; a few would-be ''Napoleons''). The detailed definition of the term is problematic and, to an extent, governed by convention.{{sfn|Anderson|2007|p=3}}{{sfn|Valentine|Brennen|Brédart|2002|pp=2–5}}
 + 
 +A distinction is normally made in current linguistics between ''proper nouns'' and ''proper names''. By this strict distinction, because the term ''noun'' is used for a class of single words (''tree'', ''beauty''), only single-word proper names are proper nouns: ''Peter'' and ''Africa'' are both proper names and proper nouns; but ''Peter the Great'' and ''South Africa'', while they are proper names, are not proper nouns (though they could be said to function as proper [[noun phrase]]s). The term ''common name'' is not much used to contrast with ''proper name'', but some linguists have used the term for that purpose. Sometimes proper names are called simply ''names'', but that term is often used more broadly. Words derived from proper names are sometimes called ''[[proper adjective]]s'' (or ''proper adverbs'', and so on), but not in mainstream linguistic theory. Not every noun or a noun phrase that refers to a unique entity is a proper name. ''Chastity,'' for instance, is a common noun, even if chastity is considered a unique abstract entity.
 + 
 +Few proper names have only one possible referent: there are many places named ''[[New Haven (disambiguation)|New Haven]]''; ''[[Jupiter (disambiguation)|Jupiter]]'' may refer to a planet, a god, a ship, a city in Florida, or a symphony; at least one person has been named ''[[Mata Hari (disambiguation)|Mata Hari]]'', but so have a horse, a song, and three films; there are towns and people named ''[[Toyota (disambiguation)|Toyota]]'', as well as the company. In English, proper names in their primary application cannot normally be modified by articles or another determiner, although some may be taken to include the article ''the'', as in ''the Netherlands'', ''[[Roaring Forties|the Roaring Forties]]'', or ''[[Rolling Stones|the Rolling Stones]]''. A proper name may appear to have a descriptive meaning, even though it does not (the Rolling Stones are not stones and do not roll; a woman named ''Rose'' is not a flower). If it had once been, it may no longer be so, for example, a location previously referred to as "the new town" may now have the proper name ''Newtown'', though it is no longer new and is now a city rather than a town.
 + 
 +In English and many other languages, proper names and words derived from them are associated with capitalization; but the details are complex, and vary from language to language (French ''lundi'', ''Canada'', ''un homme canadien'', ''un Canadien''; English ''Monday'', ''Canada'', ''a Canadian man'', ''a Canadian''; Italian ''lunedì'', ''Canada'', ''un uomo canadese'', ''un canadese''). The study of proper names is sometimes called ''[[onomastics]]'' or ''onomatology'', while a rigorous analysis of the [[semantics]] of proper names is a matter for [[philosophy of language]].{{Citation needed|date=August 2019}}
 + 
 +Proper nouns are normally invariant for number: most are singular, but a few, referring for instance to mountain ranges or groups of islands, are plural (e.g. ''Hebrides''). Typically, English proper nouns are not preceded by an [[Article (grammar)|article]] (such as ''the'' or ''a'') or other [[determiner]] (such as ''that'' or ''those'').
 + 
 +Occasionally, what would otherwise be regarded as a proper noun is used as a common noun, in which case a plural form and a determiner are possible. Examples are in cases of [[Ellipsis (linguistics)|ellipsis]] (for instance, ''the three Kennedys'' = ''the three members of the Kennedy family'') and [[metaphor]] (for instance, ''the new Gandhi'', likening a person to Mahatma Gandhi).{{sfn|Leech|2006|p=96}}{{sfn|Huddleston|Pullum|2002|pp=515–516}}
 + 
 +== Proper names ==
 +Current linguistics makes a distinction between ''proper nouns'' and ''proper names''{{efn|The distinction is recognized in the [[Oxford English Dictionary]] entry "proper, adj., n., and adv." The relevant lemmas within the entry: "proper noun n. ''Grammar'' a noun that designates an individual person, place, organization, animal, ship, etc., and is usually written with an initial capital letter; cf. ''proper name'' n. ..."; "proper name n. ... a name, consisting of a proper noun or noun phrase including a proper noun, that designates an individual person, place, organization, tame animal, ship, etc., and is usually written with an initial capital letter. ...". See also the ''Oxford Modern English Grammar''{{sfn|Aarts|2011|pp=42, 57}} and ''The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language''.{{sfn|Huddleston|Pullum|2002|pp=515–522}} In a section of ''The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language'' headed "The distinction between proper names and proper nouns", Huddleston and Pullum write: "In their primary use proper names normally refer to the particular entities that they name: in this use they have the syntactic status of NPs. ...Proper nouns, by contrast, are word-level units belonging to the category noun. ... Proper nouns are nouns which are specialised to the function of heading proper names."{{sfn| Huddleston| Pullum| 2002|p=516}} }} but this distinction is not universally observed{{sfn|Chalker|1992|p=813}} and sometimes it is observed but not rigorously.{{efn|The author distinguishes the two terms (including in separate index entries), but elsewhere in the text he conflates them. This conflation runs counter to the accepted definition of ''noun'' as denoting a class of single words, as opposed to phrases as higher-level elements of clauses and sentences—a definition that he himself gives (on p. 627, for example).{{sfn|Greenbaum|1996|p=97}}}} When the distinction is made, proper nouns are limited to single words only (possibly with ''the''), while proper names include all proper nouns (in their primary applications) as well as [[noun phrase]]s such as ''the United Kingdom'', ''North Carolina'', ''Royal Air Force'', and ''the White House''.{{efn|The authors give as an example the proper name ''New Zealand'', which includes the proper noun ''Zealand'' as its head.{{sfn|Huddleston|Pullum|2002|p=516}}}}
 +Proper names can have a common noun or a proper noun as their [[head (linguistics)|head]]; ''the United Kingdom'', for example, is a proper name with the common noun ''kingdom'' as its head, and ''North Carolina'' is headed by the proper noun ''Carolina''. Especially as titles of works, but also as nicknames and the like, some proper names contain no noun and are not formed as noun phrases (the film ''[[Being There]]''; ''Hi De Ho'' as a nickname for [[Cab Calloway]] and as the title of [[Hi-De-Ho (1947 film)|a film]] about him).
 + 
 +Proper names are also referred to (by linguists) as ''naming expressions''.{{sfn|Leech|2006|p=66}} Sometimes they are called simply ''names''; {{sfn|Leech|2006|p=66}} but that term is also used more broadly (as in "''chair'' is the name for something we sit on"); the latter type of name is called a ''common name'' to distinguish it from a ''proper name''.{{sfn|Jespersen|2013|pp=64–71}}
 + 
 +Common nouns are frequently used as components of proper names. Some examples are ''agency'', ''boulevard'', ''city'', ''day,'' and ''edition''. In such cases the common noun may determine the kind of entity, and a modifier determines the unique entity itself. For example:
 + 
 +* The 16th robotic probe to land on the planet was assigned to study the north pole, and the 17th probe the south pole.
 +:(common-noun senses throughout)
 +* When Probe 17 overflew the South Pole, it passed directly over the place where Captain Scott's expedition ended.
 +:(in this sentence, ''Probe 17'' is the proper name of a vessel, and ''South Pole'' is a proper name referring to Earth's south pole)
 +* Sanjay lives on the beach road.
 +:(the road that runs along the beach)
 +* Sanjay lives on Beach Road.
 +:(as a proper name, Beach Road may have nothing to do with the beach; it may be any distance from the waterfront)
 +* My university has a school of medicine.
 +:(no indication of the name of the university or its medical school)
 +* The John A. Burns School of Medicine is located at the University of Hawaii at Manoa.
 + 
 +Proper nouns, and all proper names, differ from common nouns grammatically in English. They may take titles, such as ''Mr Harris'' or ''Senator Harris''. Otherwise, they normally only take modifiers that add emotive coloring, such as ''old Mrs Fletcher, poor Charles'', or ''historic York''; in a formal style, this may include ''the'', as in ''the inimitable Henry Higgins''. They may also take ''the'' in the manner of common nouns in order to establish the context in which they are unique: ''the young Mr Hamilton'' (not the old one), ''the Dr Brown I know''; or as proper nouns to define an aspect of the referent: ''the young Einstein'' (Einstein when he was young). The [[Article (grammar)#Indefinite article|indefinite article]] ''a'' may similarly be used to establish a new referent: ''the column was written by a [''or'' one] Mary Price''. Proper names based on noun phrases differ grammatically from common noun phrases. They are fixed expressions, and cannot be modified internally: ''beautiful King's College'' is acceptable, but not ''King's famous College''.{{sfn|Quirk|Greenbaum|Leech|Svartvik|1985|pp=288ff}}
 + 
 +As with proper nouns, so with proper names more generally: they may only be unique within the appropriate context. For instance, India has a ministry of home affairs (a common-noun phrase) called the Ministry of Home Affairs (its proper name). Within the context of India, this identifies a unique organization. However, other countries may also have ministries of home affairs called "the Ministry of Home Affairs", but each refers to a unique object, so each is a proper name. Similarly, "Beach Road" is a unique road, though other towns may have their own roads named "Beach Road" as well. This is simply a matter of the pragmatics of naming, and of whether a naming convention provides identifiers that are unique; and this depends on the scope given by context.
 + 
 +===Strong and weak proper names ===
 +Because they are used to refer to an individual entity, proper names are, by their nature, definite; so a [[Article (grammar)#Definite article|definite article]] would be redundant, and personal names (like ''John'') are used without an article or other determiner. However, some proper names (especially certain geographical names) are usually used with the definite article. These have been termed ''weak proper names'', in contrast with the more typical ''strong proper names'', which are normally used without an article. Entities with weak proper names include geographical features (e.g. ''the Mediterranean'', ''the Thames''), buildings (e.g. ''the Parthenon''), institutions (e.g. ''the House of Commons''), cities and districts (e.g. ''The Hague'', ''the Bronx''), works of literature (e.g. '' the Bible''), and newspapers and magazines (e.g. ''The Times'', ''The Economist'', ''the New Statesman).{{sfn|Huddleston|Pullum|2002|pp=517–518}}
 +Plural proper names are weak. Such plural proper names include mountain ranges (e.g. ''the Himalayas''), and collections of islands (e.g. ''the Hebrides'').{{sfn|Huddleston|Pullum|2002|pp=517–518}}
 + 
 +The definite article is omitted when a weak proper noun is used attributively (e.g. "Hague residents are concerned ...", "... eight pints of Thames water ...").
 + 
 +===Variants ===
 +Proper names often have a number of variants, for instance a formal variant (''David'', ''the United States of America'') and an informal variant (''Dave'', ''the United States'').{{sfn|Huddleston|Pullum|2002|p=516}}
 + 
 +== Capitalization ==
 + 
 +In languages that use [[alphabetic]] scripts and that distinguish lower and upper [[Letter case|case]], there is usually an association between proper names and [[capitalization]]. In German, [[German nouns|all nouns]] are capitalized, but other words are also capitalized in proper names (not including composition titles), for instance: ''der Große Bär'' (the Great Bear, [[Ursa Major]]). For proper names, as for several other kinds of words and phrases, the details are complex, and vary sharply from language to language. For example, expressions for days of the week and months of the year are capitalized in English, but not in Spanish, French, Swedish, or Finnish, though they may be understood as proper names in all of these. Languages differ in whether most elements of multiword proper names are capitalized (American English has ''House of Representatives'', in which [[lexical word]]s are capitalized) or only the initial element (as in Slovenian ''Državni zbor'', "National Assembly"). In [[Czech language|Czech]], multiword settlement names are capitalized throughout, but non-settlement names are only capitalized in the initial element, though with many exceptions.
 + 
 +=== History of capitalization ===
 + 
 +European alphabetic scripts only developed a distinction between upper case and lower case in medieval times so in the alphabetic scripts of ancient Greek and Latin proper names were not systematically marked. They are marked with modern capitalization, however, in many modern editions of ancient texts.
 + 
 +In past centuries, [[Orthography|orthographic]] practices in English varied widely. Capitalization was much less standardized than today. Documents from the 18th century show some writers capitalizing all nouns, and others capitalizing certain nouns based on varying ideas of their importance in the discussion. Historical documents from the early United States show some examples of this process: the end (but not the beginning) of the [[United States Declaration of Independence#Annotated text of the engrossed declaration|Declaration of Independence]] (1776) and all of the [[United States Constitution|Constitution]] (1787) show nearly all nouns capitalized; the [[United States Bill of Rights#Text of the Bill of Rights|Bill of Rights]] (1789) capitalizes a few common nouns but not most of them; and the [[Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Thirteenth Constitutional Amendment]] (1865) capitalizes only proper nouns.
 + 
 +In [[Danish orthography|Danish]], from the 17th century until the orthographic reform of 1948, all nouns were capitalized.
==See also== ==See also==

Revision as of 18:56, 19 September 2022

Related e

Wikipedia
Wiktionary
Shop


Featured:

A proper noun is a noun that identifies a single entity and is used to refer to that entity (Africa, Jupiter, Sarah, Microsoft) as distinguished from a common noun, which is a noun that refers to a class of entities (continent, planet, person, corporation) and may be used when referring to instances of a specific class (a continent, another planet, these persons, our corporation).Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn Some proper nouns occur in plural form (optionally or exclusively), and then they refer to groups of entities considered as unique (the Hendersons, the Everglades, the Azores, the Pleiades). Proper nouns can also occur in secondary applications, for example modifying nouns (the Mozart experience; his Azores adventure), or in the role of common nouns (he's no Pavarotti; a few would-be Napoleons). The detailed definition of the term is problematic and, to an extent, governed by convention.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

A distinction is normally made in current linguistics between proper nouns and proper names. By this strict distinction, because the term noun is used for a class of single words (tree, beauty), only single-word proper names are proper nouns: Peter and Africa are both proper names and proper nouns; but Peter the Great and South Africa, while they are proper names, are not proper nouns (though they could be said to function as proper noun phrases). The term common name is not much used to contrast with proper name, but some linguists have used the term for that purpose. Sometimes proper names are called simply names, but that term is often used more broadly. Words derived from proper names are sometimes called proper adjectives (or proper adverbs, and so on), but not in mainstream linguistic theory. Not every noun or a noun phrase that refers to a unique entity is a proper name. Chastity, for instance, is a common noun, even if chastity is considered a unique abstract entity.

Few proper names have only one possible referent: there are many places named New Haven; Jupiter may refer to a planet, a god, a ship, a city in Florida, or a symphony; at least one person has been named Mata Hari, but so have a horse, a song, and three films; there are towns and people named Toyota, as well as the company. In English, proper names in their primary application cannot normally be modified by articles or another determiner, although some may be taken to include the article the, as in the Netherlands, the Roaring Forties, or the Rolling Stones. A proper name may appear to have a descriptive meaning, even though it does not (the Rolling Stones are not stones and do not roll; a woman named Rose is not a flower). If it had once been, it may no longer be so, for example, a location previously referred to as "the new town" may now have the proper name Newtown, though it is no longer new and is now a city rather than a town.

In English and many other languages, proper names and words derived from them are associated with capitalization; but the details are complex, and vary from language to language (French lundi, Canada, un homme canadien, un Canadien; English Monday, Canada, a Canadian man, a Canadian; Italian lunedì, Canada, un uomo canadese, un canadese). The study of proper names is sometimes called onomastics or onomatology, while a rigorous analysis of the semantics of proper names is a matter for philosophy of language.Template:Citation needed

Proper nouns are normally invariant for number: most are singular, but a few, referring for instance to mountain ranges or groups of islands, are plural (e.g. Hebrides). Typically, English proper nouns are not preceded by an article (such as the or a) or other determiner (such as that or those).

Occasionally, what would otherwise be regarded as a proper noun is used as a common noun, in which case a plural form and a determiner are possible. Examples are in cases of ellipsis (for instance, the three Kennedys = the three members of the Kennedy family) and metaphor (for instance, the new Gandhi, likening a person to Mahatma Gandhi).Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Contents

Proper names

Current linguistics makes a distinction between proper nouns and proper namesTemplate:Efn but this distinction is not universally observedTemplate:Sfn and sometimes it is observed but not rigorously.Template:Efn When the distinction is made, proper nouns are limited to single words only (possibly with the), while proper names include all proper nouns (in their primary applications) as well as noun phrases such as the United Kingdom, North Carolina, Royal Air Force, and the White House.Template:Efn Proper names can have a common noun or a proper noun as their head; the United Kingdom, for example, is a proper name with the common noun kingdom as its head, and North Carolina is headed by the proper noun Carolina. Especially as titles of works, but also as nicknames and the like, some proper names contain no noun and are not formed as noun phrases (the film Being There; Hi De Ho as a nickname for Cab Calloway and as the title of a film about him).

Proper names are also referred to (by linguists) as naming expressions.Template:Sfn Sometimes they are called simply names; Template:Sfn but that term is also used more broadly (as in "chair is the name for something we sit on"); the latter type of name is called a common name to distinguish it from a proper name.Template:Sfn

Common nouns are frequently used as components of proper names. Some examples are agency, boulevard, city, day, and edition. In such cases the common noun may determine the kind of entity, and a modifier determines the unique entity itself. For example:

  • The 16th robotic probe to land on the planet was assigned to study the north pole, and the 17th probe the south pole.
(common-noun senses throughout)
  • When Probe 17 overflew the South Pole, it passed directly over the place where Captain Scott's expedition ended.
(in this sentence, Probe 17 is the proper name of a vessel, and South Pole is a proper name referring to Earth's south pole)
  • Sanjay lives on the beach road.
(the road that runs along the beach)
  • Sanjay lives on Beach Road.
(as a proper name, Beach Road may have nothing to do with the beach; it may be any distance from the waterfront)
  • My university has a school of medicine.
(no indication of the name of the university or its medical school)
  • The John A. Burns School of Medicine is located at the University of Hawaii at Manoa.

Proper nouns, and all proper names, differ from common nouns grammatically in English. They may take titles, such as Mr Harris or Senator Harris. Otherwise, they normally only take modifiers that add emotive coloring, such as old Mrs Fletcher, poor Charles, or historic York; in a formal style, this may include the, as in the inimitable Henry Higgins. They may also take the in the manner of common nouns in order to establish the context in which they are unique: the young Mr Hamilton (not the old one), the Dr Brown I know; or as proper nouns to define an aspect of the referent: the young Einstein (Einstein when he was young). The indefinite article a may similarly be used to establish a new referent: the column was written by a [or one] Mary Price. Proper names based on noun phrases differ grammatically from common noun phrases. They are fixed expressions, and cannot be modified internally: beautiful King's College is acceptable, but not King's famous College.Template:Sfn

As with proper nouns, so with proper names more generally: they may only be unique within the appropriate context. For instance, India has a ministry of home affairs (a common-noun phrase) called the Ministry of Home Affairs (its proper name). Within the context of India, this identifies a unique organization. However, other countries may also have ministries of home affairs called "the Ministry of Home Affairs", but each refers to a unique object, so each is a proper name. Similarly, "Beach Road" is a unique road, though other towns may have their own roads named "Beach Road" as well. This is simply a matter of the pragmatics of naming, and of whether a naming convention provides identifiers that are unique; and this depends on the scope given by context.

Strong and weak proper names

Because they are used to refer to an individual entity, proper names are, by their nature, definite; so a definite article would be redundant, and personal names (like John) are used without an article or other determiner. However, some proper names (especially certain geographical names) are usually used with the definite article. These have been termed weak proper names, in contrast with the more typical strong proper names, which are normally used without an article. Entities with weak proper names include geographical features (e.g. the Mediterranean, the Thames), buildings (e.g. the Parthenon), institutions (e.g. the House of Commons), cities and districts (e.g. The Hague, the Bronx), works of literature (e.g. the Bible), and newspapers and magazines (e.g. The Times, The Economist, the New Statesman).Template:Sfn Plural proper names are weak. Such plural proper names include mountain ranges (e.g. the Himalayas), and collections of islands (e.g. the Hebrides).Template:Sfn

The definite article is omitted when a weak proper noun is used attributively (e.g. "Hague residents are concerned ...", "... eight pints of Thames water ...").

Variants

Proper names often have a number of variants, for instance a formal variant (David, the United States of America) and an informal variant (Dave, the United States).Template:Sfn

Capitalization

In languages that use alphabetic scripts and that distinguish lower and upper case, there is usually an association between proper names and capitalization. In German, all nouns are capitalized, but other words are also capitalized in proper names (not including composition titles), for instance: der Große Bär (the Great Bear, Ursa Major). For proper names, as for several other kinds of words and phrases, the details are complex, and vary sharply from language to language. For example, expressions for days of the week and months of the year are capitalized in English, but not in Spanish, French, Swedish, or Finnish, though they may be understood as proper names in all of these. Languages differ in whether most elements of multiword proper names are capitalized (American English has House of Representatives, in which lexical words are capitalized) or only the initial element (as in Slovenian Državni zbor, "National Assembly"). In Czech, multiword settlement names are capitalized throughout, but non-settlement names are only capitalized in the initial element, though with many exceptions.

History of capitalization

European alphabetic scripts only developed a distinction between upper case and lower case in medieval times so in the alphabetic scripts of ancient Greek and Latin proper names were not systematically marked. They are marked with modern capitalization, however, in many modern editions of ancient texts.

In past centuries, orthographic practices in English varied widely. Capitalization was much less standardized than today. Documents from the 18th century show some writers capitalizing all nouns, and others capitalizing certain nouns based on varying ideas of their importance in the discussion. Historical documents from the early United States show some examples of this process: the end (but not the beginning) of the Declaration of Independence (1776) and all of the Constitution (1787) show nearly all nouns capitalized; the Bill of Rights (1789) capitalizes a few common nouns but not most of them; and the Thirteenth Constitutional Amendment (1865) capitalizes only proper nouns.

In Danish, from the 17th century until the orthographic reform of 1948, all nouns were capitalized.

See also




Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Proper noun" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

Personal tools