No, luggage is a common noun, not a proper noun. The term proper noun refers to the name of a specific person, place, or thing, as opposed to a common noun which is the name of some general type of thing. There are many pieces of luggage, it is not a specific thing. Whereas, Barack Obama is the name of a specific person, and is therefore a proper noun.
A noun is a person, place or thing. Luggage is a thing. Therefore, luggage is a noun.
The noun luggage is a common, concrete, mass noun.
The noun luggage is an uncountable noun, a form of aggregate noun, a word representing an indefinite number of elements or parts. The noun luggage has no plural form.The possessive form of the noun luggage is luggage's.Example: The luggage's style was very old fashioned.
The word "luggage" is a noun.
The is no abstract noun form for the concrete noun luggage. The synonym (noun) baggage has an abstract context as a word for emotions or thoughts that stem from painful or unpleasant past experiences that affect present behavior.
"Park Avenue" is a proper noun, because it is a place. Proper nouns like this should always be capitalized.
common noun
The proper term for luggage for a hat would be a hat box.
Pencil proper or common noun
The noun luggage is an uncountable noun, a type of aggregate noun, a word representing an indefinite number of parts. The noun luggage a word for a piece of luggage or many pieces of luggage.
proper noun
Exxon is a proper noun