Topic Explanation and Use
Core idea
A good noun phrase adds detail without hiding the main noun.
A noun phrase is the noun plus the words that describe or limit it. Good noun phrases carry detail efficiently, but overloaded ones become hard to read.
Use noun phrases to pack meaning into a short space, especially in summaries and formal writing. The key is to keep the head noun clear while adding only useful detail.
At C1 level, use this structure for precision and logic, not for decorative complexity.
Use it here
- Keep the main noun easy to identify.
- Place modifiers close to the noun they describe.
- If the noun phrase becomes too heavy, turn part of it into a full clause.
Watch it work
Remember this
- Find the head noun first.
- Add only the modifiers that help the reader understand the noun.
- Place modifiers in a natural order before the noun.
- Move part of the phrase into a clause if the stack becomes hard to read.
- Check that the noun phrase still points to one clear idea.
Real-World Examples with Noun Phrases
Example 1
Too weakThe city launched a policy transport new plan.
BetterThe city launched a new public transport plan.
This correction matches the intended meaning and keeps Noun Phrases natural.
Example 2
Too weakThe report discussed housing affordable long-term options.
BetterThe report discussed long-term affordable housing options.
This version sounds more natural because Noun Phrases fits the sentence clearly.
Common Errors with Noun Phrases
Common problem 1
stacking modifiers in an order that makes the noun phrase hard to read
WeakThe city launched a policy transport new plan.
StrongThe city launched a new public transport plan.
Fix: keep the head noun clear and move modifiers into a natural order
Common problem 2
hiding the head noun under too many modifiers
WeakThe report recommended a community support transport emergency plan.
StrongThe report recommended an emergency community transport support plan.
Fix: keep the head noun clear and arrange the modifiers in a natural order
Common problem 3
using a noun phrase where a full clause would be clearer
WeakThe rapid district late-bus reduction target created confusion.
StrongThe district target to reduce late buses quickly created confusion.
Fix: turn part of the noun phrase into a clause when the stack becomes hard to read
Interactive Practice Lab
Practice
First notice the right form. Then build it yourself. Then fix it in a full sentence.
Score: 0/4
Read for meaning first. If the meaning changes, the grammar usually has to change too.
1. Quick pick
Choose the stronger sentence for Noun Phrases.
2. Build it
Put this Noun Phrases sentence in the correct order.
Tap a chunk to move it down. Tap it again to send it back.
3. Type the fix
Rewrite the sentence so Noun Phrases is correct.
Fix this: The article described policy education recent reforms.
4. Final sort
Mark each sentence as correct or needing a fix.
The school announced an after-class reading support program.
The school announced a support reading after-class program.
Residents want a fair neighbourhood parking system.
Residents want a parking neighbourhood fair system.
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