It would only be proper if it was the name of place. If it was the name of the restaraunt, like Playground Bar and Grill, it would be a proper noun. If you are just going to the playground down the street, it would be a plain old common noun. This is usually the case.
The noun playground is a countable noun. Singular: playground Plural: playgrounds
No, it is not a preposition. The word playground is a noun.
Yes! As a general rule of thumb, nouns are persons, places, things, or ideas. A playground is definitely in the place or thing category.
The noun playground is a singular, common, concrete, compound noun; an outdoor area provided for children to play, word for a thing; a piece of land used for games and recreation, a word for a place.
common noun
The possessive form of the plural noun 'women' is women's.Example: A women's group raised the money for the playground.
The word is swing. Golfers swing the golf club. Children play on a swing at the playground.
If you take out the prepositional phrase, the sentence will still make sense. A prepositional phrase contains a preposition, a noun, and usually an article or other adjective. "The little children raced around the playground." If you take out "around the playground", the sentence would still make sense. The word "around" is the preposition and "playground" is the noun that is the object of the preposition. Therefore, "around the playground" is the prepositional phrase in this sentence.
Common
Common noun
common
Pea is a common noun, and peas is the plural...still a common noun.