No, the word 'somewhere' is not a noun.
The word 'somewhere' is a pronoun and an adverb.
The pronoun 'somewhere' is an indefinite pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun for an unknown or unnamed place.
The adverb 'somewhere' is a word used to modify a verb, an adjective, or another adverb as in or at an unknown place.
Examples:
Somewhere, over the rainbow, blue birds fly. (pronoun)
Somewhere there are people who have nothing in this world to do but ride around in fancy cars and dine on Russian caviar. (adverb)
No. Although often seen with prepositions (e.g. somewhere down the road), it is a noun or an adverb. e.g. It came from somewhere. (noun)/ We went somewhere. (adverb)
common noun
Is this proper Or common noun ?
Gumdrops in a plural noun. Gumdrop is a common noun.
No, the word "homesick" is not a common noun but it is an abstract noun.
Proper nouns are names, so unless you know somebody or somewhere named Hoof, then it's a common noun.
common noun
No. Although often seen with prepositions (e.g. somewhere down the road), it is a noun or an adverb. e.g. It came from somewhere. (noun)/ We went somewhere. (adverb)
Common
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.
Camel is a common noun.
Th word tail is a common noun because the first letter of a proper noun is capitalized.
it is re@lly @ common noun