New Zealand is a compound proper adjective, as it is made up of two words to describe something specific.
The noun 'Snares Island' is a proper noun, the name of a specific place in New Zealand.
Yes, the compound noun 'Anzac Day' is a proper noun, the name of a national day of remembrance in Australia and New Zealand; the name of a specific thing.
The proper noun, an island nation near Australia, is spelled "New Zealand".
That is the correct spelling of the proper noun Remuera (suburb of Auckland, New Zealand).
No, it isn't a proper noun because it is not a person's name or place. (All proper nouns need capital letters. E.g John Smith, New Zealand, etc.)
The correct spelling of the proper noun is Whangaparaoa(peninsula in the Hauraki Gulf, north of Auckland, New Zealand).
That is the correct spelling of the proper noun "Grey Lynn" (residential neighborhood of Auckland, New Zealand).
The noun 'New York' is a singular, proper noun, the name of a state and the name of a city.
if you are asking this your in need of attention proper noun
New Zealand is officially named "New Zealand". Its inhabitants are generally referred to as "New Zealanders" or, colloquially, "Kiwis". It was discovered by Dutch explorer Abel Tasman in 1642, and some time after he named it "Nieuw Zeeland", which later became anglicised as New Zealand. New Zealand is sometimes referred to as "Aotearoa" one of the names used by some Maori and more commonly by those on the political far left in recent times. "Aotearoa" first referred to the north island only, then later became used (more commonly since the 1990s) for the whole country. Prior to European settlement, Maori did not have a concept of New Zealand being a singular nation as they were several warring tribes that had no use or desire for unification. New Zealand's national anthem is "God Defend New Zealand" and its flag is referred to as the New Zealand flag.
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