First of all, no because you didn't even seperate the sentence in question from the question itself.
Secondly, no because there's nothing cojoining the two parts of the sentence i.e.
"The young people danced while the older people visited" or "The young people danced, the older people visited."
The class visited the City Cultural Center to see the European historical clothing display.
The proper adjective is "American," derived from the proper noun "America."
Oh, dude, the common noun is "parents" because it refers to a general group of people, and the proper nouns are "Aiden" and "Mandeville" because they are specific names. So, like, Aiden and his parents casually strolled through Mandeville in the summer, no big deal.
The proper adjective form for Navajo is Navajo, as in Navajo Nation, Navajo people, Navajo history, Navajo art, etc. An example sentence: We visited the Navajo display at the museum to see the Navajo jewelry.
No, both Ali and Ahmed are nouns, proper nouns, the names of people. Proper nouns are always capitalized.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence, for example:Ali and Ahmed visited Spain. They took many photos to show to their family. (the pronouns 'they' and 'their' take the place of the nouns 'Ali and Ahmed' in the second second sentence)
Faith should be capitalized when it is used as part of a proper noun or at the beginning of a sentence. For example: "I have faith in God," or "I visited the Church of Faith."
The nouns in the sentence are:people (plural, common, concrete noun; subject of the sentence)family (singular, common, concrete noun; object of the preposition 'from')Washington Monument (singular, proper, concrete noun; direct object)Washington D.C. (singular, proper, concrete noun; object of the preposition 'in')The pronoun in the sentence is our (possessive adjective, describes the noun 'family') Note: The word 'several' can be an indefinite pronoun. However, in this sentence it functions as an adjective describing the noun 'family'.Example use as a pronoun: Several of our family have visited...
Sentence B. has the proper noun: Lichtenstein (the name of a specific country; the name of a specific place.
To scare people that can't write a proper sentence in English.
No, only the proper noun is capitalized.The other words that are always capitalized are the first word in a sentence, the first person pronoun 'I', and acronyms.Example: We visited the Eiffel Tower on our trip to Paris.
yeah that's a proper sentence
Yes.... mostly all capital people places or things are proper nouns if they are not sentence beginers.