I learned that nouns can name a person, a place, a thing, or an idea.
Nouns can be common or proper. It's important to know this because, in standard English, proper nouns begin with a capital letter, regardless of their use in a sentence, while common nouns only begin with a capital letter at the beginning of the sentence.
They can also be concrete or abstract.
About Conjunctions
Conjunctions join words, for example, and, but, or
“I like fish. I don’t like shrimp.”
Now, using a conjunction, we could make a single sentence:
“I like fish, but I don’t like shrimp.”
Superlative Adjectives
These are used to describe an object or person that is at the top or bottom of a quality within a group of three or more.
Formation:
Short adjectives (1 syllable): The + adjective + -est (e.g., fast - the fastest).
Long adjectives (2+ syllables): The most + adjective (e.g., expensive - the most expensive).
Examples:
This is the smallest box I've ever seen.
She is the most intelligent student in the class.