One of the books Miss Mason used with 4-6 graders is How To Tell The Parts of Speech, by E. A. Abbott. The book is dated enough that it is of limited use for today’s teacher/parent, unless you are confident enough in your knowledge of grammar to make adaptations and corrections as you go. We can, however, still glean some useful principles and applications from it. Miss Mason particularly recommended that her teachers read the preface, which I shared in another post in this grammar series.
Below I share just the chapter on nouns, transcribed electronically, and I have not done anything to the formatting or checked for typos from the transcription, it's a raw copy:
Tell me the names of some persons, such us
John, Mary.
2. Tell me the names of some places; such as
London, Middlesen, England.
8. Tell me the names of some things that you can
see, feel, hear, or smell; such as apples, soldiers,
cat, sky, air, thunder, gas.
•4. Tell me the names of some groups of pergons or things ; such as class, family, crowd, fock,
herd.
EXERCISE I.
• Write or repeat four names of (1) boys; (2)
girls ; (3) places; (4) rivers ; (5) public buildings;
(6) dogg ; (7) horses ; (8) other animals ; etc.
Write or repeat four names of (1) things good to
eat; (2) parts of a house ; (3) parts of the body
Tell me the names of some persons, such us
John, Mary.
2. Tell me the names of some places; such as
London, Middlesen, England.
8. Tell me the names of some things that you can
see, feel, hear, or smell; such as apples, soldiers,
cat, sky, air, thunder, gas.
•4. Tell me the names of some groups of pergons or things ; such as class, family, crowd, fock,
herd.
EXERCISE I.
• Write or repeat four names of (1) boys; (2)
girls ; (3) places; (4) rivers ; (5) public buildings;
(6) dogg ; (7) horses ; (8) other animals ; etc.
Write or repeat four names of (1) things good to
eat; (2) parts of a house ; (3) parts of the body
3
The Parts of Speech
(4) parte of free1 (5) parts of a book; (6) porta
of a ship; (7) thing used for writing: (a) tools
used by a gardener: (9) by a carpenter, etc.
• Write or repeat as many names as you aan of
group of (1) boys or girls; (2) soldiers : (3) other
pensous; (1) aulmale; (6) trees; (6) houses ; (7)
books ; cto.
5. Now look at this plece of chalk. What sort of a
thing is it? It is wbite, solid, rough or amooth, useful,
amall or large. All these worels tell us the guulitius
of the chalk (quality means of what sort)! well, I
want nuncs of these qualities ; give me them: rohite
ness, solidness or solidity, roughness or smoothness, usefulness or utility, smallness, lurgenese.
You cannot sec usefulness, but usefulness is the
name of a quality of the chalk.
6. Tell me some more names of the qualities of
things, such as weight, beauty.
7. Tell me some names of the qualities of persona:
(a) good qualities or virtues, such as gentleness,
honesty, justice, temperance; (b) bal qualities or
vices, such as harxhuese, cruelty, dishonesty, injur.
tice, intempurance, untruthfulness.
8. Tell me some names of (a) the feelings of your
body, such as hunger, (b) the feelings of your mind,
such as joy, hope, pity.
9. Tell me some paines of actions : such as jumping, running, readiny, counting, singing.
EXERCISE II.
Write or repeat six names of (1) actions ; (2)
feelings of your mind: (3) good qualities of persons :
() had qualities of penons ; 6) qualities of coal;
(6) air; (7) India-rubber; (8) snow; (9) paper;
(10) hair; (11) steel: (12) water.
10. Hoy shall we call all these namus? Ir we
call them 11 Dames," people will think we mean none
but names of persons; but we mean names of places,
of things, of faults, actions, etc., as well. So we
will call them Nouns, which is another word for
Names (1)
EXERCISE III.
Point out the Nouns in
Some thoughtless boys were playing with stones
near & pond. During their play they noticed a family
of frogs and began to pelt them, not out of cruelty,
for they were not cruel, but out of thoughtlessness.
Very soon they hit one of the frogs, and all the
family at once dived down in a fright beneath the surface of the water. - This is fine fun," said the boys,
we will wait till they come up again, and then we
will give them a good pelting." Just then the mother
of the frogs popped up her bead, croaking so pitifully
that the boys held their hands and did not pelt her.
Young gentlemen," said she, "if you are really
gentle you will not continue your sport.
How would
you like it if a giant killed your mother or sister out
of sport? But that is what you have done to me:
you have killed my youngest daughter, and maimed
my two sons for life. What is sport to you is death
to us;
11. Sometimes you may be pazzled about Nouns.
You may not nee, for example, that pating in the
Exercise above is the name of an action, and so you
may not know that it is a Noon. So here to a good
way to find whether a word is a Noun or not, —
12. If a word (sometimes with 'a' or 'the
before it') can come after “I like," or "dislike," to answer the question, “What do you
like?" it is a Noun. (
13. Thus you can say, " I like apples, Thomas,
nothing, a walk, the country, jumping ; " but you
cannot say, “I like quickly;" 80 quickly is not a
Noun. Of course, you must be careful to see how a
word is used in the Exercise, before you say it is
a Noun. For example, " playing " might sometimes
be a Noun, as in " I like playing," but it is clearly
not a Noun in the first line of the Exercise above,
because it is not there used as a Name.
How to make Nouns.
14. Sometimes you can make Nouns out of other
words that are not Nouns. For example, slow is
not a Noun; but you can make a Noun out of it,
slovonese. High is not a Noun; but you can make
a Noun out of it, --height.
EXERCISE IY.
Make Nouns out of the following words : prix,
broad, glad, long, deep, careless, narrow, vide,
ready, obstinate, persevere, just, humble, pious, brave, repent.• 15. Look carefully as the intro Nowh the
following contacar
« Charle to the oldest son of the family.
Chana and son, you nee, ara almaply dimenant
name for the same penon; but they are lo difer
ent Linda of names.
(1) Charla is the name of a particular person,
that is, of an individual. The name may be sald to
belong to Charles, to be peculiarly Mis onon. Hence,
It le called a Proper Noun. (Proper means
* one's own,' as in property, appropriate.)
(2) Son is a name common to Charles and all his
brothers; Indeed, to all boy-children. It is the name
of every one of a class. Hence, it is called a Common Noun.
• 16. Tell the difference between (1) Helen, (2)
girl; (1) London, (2) city; (1) Ponto, (2) dog;
(1) Racer, (2) horse; (1) Hudson, (2) river; (1)
State-House, (2) building; (1) Post-Office, (2)
house.
MODEL. — (1) Helen in the name of a particular girl: it in
her proper (her com) name. Therefore it is a Proper Noun.
(2) Girl in the name, not only of Helen, but of all other girls :
It is commor to them all. Therefore it is a Common Youn. .
(1) A Proper Noun is a name peculiar or
proper to an individual.
(2) A Common Noun is a name common to a class.
• 17. But the sentence has a third Noun, family.
It means Charles and his brother (and, perhaps,
some other persons) taken together, spoken of 19 a
group. Hence, it is called a Collective Noun.
(Collective meana 'taken together.')
• 18. Tell the difference between the Nouns in
cach of the following phrases :
(1) A bevy of girls, (2) a pack of wolves, (3)
an army of ants; (4) a herd of buffaloes ; (5) a
fock of sheep; (6) u brood of chickens; (7) a
clump of bushes; (8) a bunch of grapes ; (9) a roto
of houses.
—
(3) A Collective Noun is the name of a
number of objects taken together, the name
of a group.
N.B. — An object is anything of which we can
think, something throion in the way of our minds.
• 19. Once more. ** Charles " is said to be te the
oldest son"; and oldest tells us of a quality of
Charles's. ($ 5] What is its name? aye? Bat when
we give this quality a name, we think of it as ab.
stracted (that is, taken arowy) from Charles.
Hence, it is called an Abstract Noun. So, names
of feelings (5 8), of actions CS 9), and of some other
things, help us to think of the feelings, etc., ag
taken away from the persons who feel, act, etc.;
and they, too, are hence called Abstract Nouns.
(4) An Abstract Noun is the name of a quality, feeling, action, etc, thought of as abtracted, a aban amay, from the
object to
which it belong.
90. Tell the atmammana batucen the Nouna ha
auch or the following cantander
(1) The weight of the lead broke the wale.
(2) George's anger required panishment.
(8) The laughing of the knot of boys ww beard in
the school-noom.
(4) The ill-health of the master gave the school.
holiday.
EXERCISE V.
Tell the kind of each Noun in Bercloo III. and
in —
At the time of Braddock's defeat, an Indian chiot
named Pontiac had seen the red-coats running away
before his own men. Being a man of great courage
and skill, he laid a plan to unite all the tribes of his
race, and to drive the English out of America. First
he tried to take Detroit, which was then only a fort;
but be failed, and his conspiracy broke down. Soon
after, he was murdered by another Indian in
drunken frolic.
* EXERCISE VI.
Write this story again in your own words, being
careful to use some Nouns of each kind.
21. A Noun is a name of any kind. (')
N.B. - A Noun is not a thing, but the name of a
thing. A cow is not a Noun ; but the word - "cow" is a noun.
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