Post-UTMEEnglish LanguageVocabulary

Identify the noun: 'Beauty is divine.'

ABeautyCORRECT
Bis
Cdivine
Dthe
AI
Toaster Teacher
Why the answer is A, and why the others tempt you.
**The reasoning** A noun is a naming word — it names a person, place, thing, or *idea*. In "Beauty is divine," we need to identify which word is doing the naming. - **Beauty** = an abstract idea/quality (noun) - **is** = a linking verb (connects the subject to a description) - **divine** = an adjective (describes what beauty is like) - **the** = doesn't even appear in this sentence! The principle here is **identifying parts of speech**. "Beauty" is the *subject* of the sentence — the thing we're talking about. It's an abstract noun, just like "love," "courage," or "happiness." **Why the wrong options tempt you** **B) is** — You might pick this if you're rushing and not remembering that "is" shows existence/state, not a name. It's a verb. **C) divine** — This describes beauty, so it feels important. But descriptive words are adjectives, not nouns. **D) the** — This option is literally not in the sentence! Always read carefully. **Quick takeaway** Ask yourself: "What is this sentence *about*?" That thing is your noun — here, it's the abstract quality called **Beauty**.
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