Yes, the noun 'marriage' is a common noun, a general word for a legally or formally recognized union of two people as partners in a relationship; a general word for a ceremony uniting two people as partners; a general word for a combination or mixture of two or more elements, a fusion.
No, marriage is a common noun, a singular, abstract noun.A common noun becomes a proper noun when it is the name of a person, place, thing, or a title; for example:Marriage Road, San Jose, CA'Marriage on the Rocks', movie 1965Clark County Marriage Bureau, Las Vegas, NVThe Marriage Code of Thailand (The Civil and Commercial Code of Thailand, Book 5)
Yes, the noun 'marriage' is a countable noun. The plural noun is marriages.
It is common noun except when it is proper noun (January 6th 1562, at St. Mary at Hill; and on September 25th 1569, the marriage of Georgius Purse to Margata Rumforth took place at St. Andrew's, Enfield.), or a verb (Can the baby purse his lips?) or an adjective (The government will not loosen its purse strings))
The noun forms of the verb to marry are marriage and the gerund, marrying.
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.
The noun form is marriage.
Camel is a common noun.
Th word tail is a common noun because the first letter of a proper noun is capitalized.