No, Dinosaur National Monument is a noun, a proper noun, the name of a specific place on the Colorado Utah border. A proper noun is always capitalized.
A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence. The pronoun that takes the place of the noun Dinosaur National Monument is 'it'.
Example: We visited the Dinosaur National Monument on our trip. It contains many dinosaur fossils.
No, the noun dinosaur is a common noun, a word for any kind of dinosaur anywhere.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing; for example:Dino, Fred Flinstone's pet dinosaurRex, character in the movie "Toy Story"Dinosaur National Monument, UtahDinosaur Bar-B-Que, Syracuse, NY"Dinosaur Lake", a novel by Kathryn Meyer Griffith
There is a monument in Paris. (monument is common, Paris is proper)
Its proper name is the Washington Monument. Its shape is an obelisk.
No, Australian is a proper adjective, a word used to describe a noun as of or from Australia.There is no type of pronoun called a 'proper pronoun'.
Proper
Its proper name is the Washington Monument. Its shape is an obelisk.
No, possessive pronouns are not proper nouns. They are a type of pronoun used to show ownership or possession. Examples of possessive pronouns include "mine," "yours," "his," "hers," and "theirs."
The nouns in the sentence are:people (plural, common, concrete noun; subject of the sentence)family (singular, common, concrete noun; object of the preposition 'from')Washington Monument (singular, proper, concrete noun; direct object)Washington D.C. (singular, proper, concrete noun; object of the preposition 'in')The pronoun in the sentence is our (possessive adjective, describes the noun 'family') Note: The word 'several' can be an indefinite pronoun. However, in this sentence it functions as an adjective describing the noun 'family'.Example use as a pronoun: Several of our family have visited...
No, you is a pronoun.
She went to see the Eiffel Tower. She is the pronoun, and Eiffel is the Proper Adjective.
A proper noun is a specific name used for an individual, place, or organization (e.g., John, Paris, Microsoft). In terms of pronouns, "me" is an objective pronoun that is typically used as the object of a verb or preposition (e.g., She gave the book to me).
No, the word she is not a proper noun. It is a pronoun. The word Shea is a proper noun.