I guess comics...
No, but if you add the name of a cartoon, then it becomes a proper noun.
The noun 'Garfield' is a proper noun, the name of a specific person or place (or a cartoon cat).
Yes , Bugs Bunny is a proper noun seeing that it is a "person's" name even though it's a cartoon character .
Yes , Bugs Bunny is a proper noun seeing that it is a "person's" name even though it's a cartoon character .
That is the correct spelling of the proper noun "Flintstones" (cartoon family).
Yes, the noun 'Garfield' is a proper noun, the name of a specific person or place (or a cartoon cat).
The word 'snoopy' (lower case s) is not a noun, it's an adjective used to describe a noun as offensively curious or inquisitive.The common noun form of the adjective 'snoopy' is snoopiness.The word 'snoopy' is the adjective form of the common noun snoop.Note: The word 'Snoopy' (capital S) is a proper noun the name of a specific cartoon character.
A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place or thing. Girl is a common noun. The girl Topsy is a proper noun. Boy is a common noun, the boy Bobby is proper.
No, but if you add the name of a cartoon, then it becomes a proper noun.
No, the word 'Snoopy' (capital S) is a proper noun the name of a specific cartoon character.The word 'snoopy' (lower case s) is not a noun, it's an adjective used to describe a noun as offensively curious or inquisitive.
Political is an adjective; cartoon is a noun.
The noun 'cartoon' is a common noun, a general word for a humorous drawing in a newspaper or magazine, often with words; a movie or television show that is made by photographing a series of drawings.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing; for example, "Peanuts" or "SpongeBob SquarePants".A collective noun is a word used to group people or things taken together as one whole in a descriptive way; for example, a series of cartoons (the noun 'series' is functioning as the collective noun).