Yes the word mill is a noun. It is a common noun.
No, "run of the mill" is not hyphenated. It is an idiomatic expression that means something is ordinary or average. When used as a modifier before a noun, it should be written as "run-of-the-mill."
A special noun is also called an abstract noun, or idea noun. Abstract nouns are words for things that you can't see, you can't hear, you can't smell, you can't taste, and you can't touch; they are words for things you think, you know, you believe, you understand, or you feel emotionally. In the sentence 'They stop at Mill Park', there are no abstract nouns. Perhaps for you, special noun means a proper noun, a name for a specific person, place, or thing. Proper nouns are always capitalized. The proper noun in the sentence is the specific place, Mill Park.
Yes, the noun 'miller' is a concrete noun, a word for someone who owns or works in a grain mill; a word for a physical person.
No, "run of the mill" is not hyphenated. It is an idiomatic expression used to describe something that is average or ordinary. However, when used as a compound adjective before a noun, it can be hyphenated as "run-of-the-mill." For example, you would say "a run-of-the-mill product."
The word 'house' is a general noun; a common, singular, concrete noun, a word for any house of any kind. A specific noun for house is a town house, a dog house, a carriage house, my house, etc. A very specific noun for house is The White House, Ten Downing Street, 155 Main Street, or Fallingwater House, Mill Run Road, Mill Run, PA.
Oh, dude, a table is a common noun. It's like, not a proper noun that's all fancy with a capital letter and stuff. So yeah, it's just your run-of-the-mill, everyday noun that describes a piece of furniture you can eat your pizza on.
Well, honey, "sleep" is a common noun. It's not special enough to be a proper noun like "Betty White" or "Mount Everest." So, go ahead and catch some Z's knowing that "sleep" is just your average, run-of-the-mill common noun.
No, the noun 'revival' is a common noun, a general word for any revival of any kind.A proper noun is the name or title of a specific person, place, or thing; for example, Revival Row (street) in Fort Mill, SC or "Revival" a novel by Stephen King.
"Mill" alone as a noun, is a generic term for a range of a plant or factory dedicated to a specific process such grain-milling to produce flour, cotton-weaving, timber-sawing, etc. -- with the product's name added as an adjunct (flour mill, sugar mill, cotton mill, steel mill, sawmill).May also be described by the motive power, e.g. "windmill", water mill".Mill is also a verb meaning to crush or grind (as with cereal grains), or to cut and shape metals withmachine tools.Money1 mill is 1/10 of 1 cent. (1/1000 of a dollar)At one time it was common to have tax tokens denominated in mills.
Oh, dude, a rug is a common noun. It's not like some fancy proper noun like Beyoncé or Hogwarts. Just your everyday, run-of-the-mill rug. But hey, it's still doing its job of tying the room together, man.
The noun 'money' is a common, uncountable noun. The noun 'money' is a concrete noun as a word for bank notes, bills, and coins. The noun 'money' is an abstract noun as a word for wealth, salary, income, etc.
Sutter's Mill ? or Stutter Mill ?