The plural noun children is a common noun, a word for any children anywhere.
A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, thing, or a title; for example:
Child is a common noun. The proper noun Child would be a family name, as in Robert D. Child, the artist.
Some common nouns for the proper noun 'The Boxcar Children' are books, stories, series.
As a name of a road , Park Avenue', it is a proper noun, and both words star with a capital letter. However, when used separately, as 'the park, or 'the avenue', they are common nouns and so not need a capital letter.
It is a proper noun, because it is the name of a specific thing.
Proper noun
proper
No, children is a noun, a plural, common, noun. The pronouns for the word children are they (subject), them (object), their (subject possessive), and theirs (object possessive).
Jack is a student. (the proper noun 'Jack' with the verb to be 'is')Jack is a student. (the verb to be 'is' with the common noun 'student')The children walk to school. (the common noun 'children' with the action verb 'walk')Jill can walk with them. (the proper noun 'Jill' with the auxiliary verb 'can')The children can't be late. (the common noun 'children' with the auxiliary verb-adverb contraction 'can't')
it's a common noun. a proper noun would be Spider-Man.
Pencil proper or common noun
The noun cassette is a common noun.
a common noun?