Articles is a plural noun. Article is a common noun.
Articles are a type of determiner that come before a noun to indicate whether the noun is specific or general. Examples include "the," "a," and "an."
I can't see how. In grammar, an article is a word that indicates the type of reference being made by a related noun. Some common articles are "a", "an", and "the." You can't stick any kind of noun... proper or common... in such a word and have it make sense.
common noun
Yes, the word Wigan is a noun, a proper noun, the name of a town in Greater Manchester, UK.The word wigan is also a common noun, a word for a canvas like cotton fabric, used to stiffen articles of clothing.
The word 'the' is not a noun or a pronoun.The word 'the' is the definitearticle. The definite article 'the' is placed before a noun to indicate that the noun is a specific person (persons) or thing (things).The indefinite articles (a and an) are placed before a singular noun to indicate that the noun is a word for any person or thing.
No, the word notion is a noun, a singular common noun. The singular noun notion is an abstract noun as a word for a conception of or belief about something; a sudden wish or desire. The plural noun notions is a concrete noun as a word for small useful articles (as pins, needles, or thread).
Common
Common noun
common
Pea is a common noun, and peas is the plural...still a common noun.
A common noun.
Most definitely a common noun.