Yes, the word 'tale' is a thing, and therefore a noun.
Yes, the word tale is a common noun, a word for any tale of any kind.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, thing, or a title; for example:Old Tale Road, Boulder, COTale of the Whale (restaurant), Nags Head, NCTale Of Spice (restaurant), Chippenham, United Kingdom"The Professor: A Tale" by Charlotte Bronte"The Tale of Despereaux", 2008 animated feature with Matthew Broderick
Tale and tail are homographs; two words that sound the same but have different totally different meanings.
The compound noun 'fairy tale' is a commonnoun, a general word for a type of story.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing; for example:Fairy Tail Farms, Elk Grove, CAFairy Tails brand children's hair care products"The Fairy Tale Bride", a novel by Kelly McClymer
The noun tall is a word for a clothing size. The word tall is also an adjective, a word that describes a noun; for example, a tall tree or a tall tale.
As in English it is a noun clause: Conte de Fées.
The closest word is the proper noun Thumbelina (a fairy tale, a tiny character).
First identify the part of speech. Tale is a noun because it is a name for a thing. Nouns do lots of jobs in a sentence but most often they are the subjects of simple sentences. The subject noun is the person, place, thing or idea that is doing something or being described. I will use another noun, dog, as an example. A dog runs fast. The sentence tells me what the noun dog is doing. A dog is a good friend. The sentence describes the dog being something. Do the same with Tale by either telling what the tale is doing or describe what the tale is like (remember tale means a story so my two sentences would not make sense with it.). A more complicated senentce puts the noun after the verb and the longer description first: The fastest thing in the world is a dog. Nouns can also be used as objects and even as a special type of adjectives: It was of a dog I wanted to speak. I will be in the dog house if I don't do my own work.
The correct spelling of the proper noun is Rapunzel(long-haired fairy tale princess).
A proper noun is the name or title of a specific person, place, or thing.Examples of proper nouns for the common noun 'frog' are:Kermit the FrogFrog Creek, WI 54859Frog Street Press, Inc. in Grapevine, TX"The Frog Prince" (fairy tale)
The noun rabbit is a common noun, a word for any rabbit.A common noun becomes a proper noun when it is the name of a specific person, place, thing, or a title. For example:The Tale of Perter Rabbit by Beatrix PotterRabbit Creek Road in Anchorage AKRabbit Hill Inn bed and breakfast in VTBoy and Rabbit, portrait by Henry Raeburn Inglis (1814)
No, the word "hero" does not need to be capitalized in the sentence "The tall tale hero John Henry is an American hero." In this context, "hero" is used as a common noun rather than a proper noun. Only proper nouns, such as names or titles, should be capitalized.
yes, a fable is a noun. :a short tale to teach a moral lesson, often with animals or inanimate objects as characters;example:the tortoise and the hare; Aesop's fables.