The common noun for the Broadway is street.
NO. It would only be a proper noun if there was the name of the street before it. EX: 9th avenue, or Hickory Avenue. Then it would be a proper noun. When alone, it is a regular noun.
No, it is a proper noun.
Broadway is a proper noun, as it is the name of a particular thing. A proper noun is always capitalized. The word theatre is a common noun. But National Theatre is a proper noun.
"Park Avenue" is a proper noun, because it is a place. Proper nouns like this should always be capitalized.
Yes, the noun 'avenue' is a common noun, a general word for a wide street or thoroughfare; a general word for a way to a place or goal; a general word for any avenue of any kind.
Broadway Avenue Bridge was created in 1987.
it is a common nouns because it is a names person places or thing
The noun 'avenue' is not a standard collective noun. A collective noun is a noun used to group people or things in a descriptive way. The noun 'avenue' is a singular, common noun. The noun 'avenue' is a concrete noun as a word for a broad passageway bordered by trees; a broad street or road; a word for a thing. The noun 'avenue' is an abstract noun as a word for a way or route to a place or goal; a word for a concept.
Broadway.
Broadway
Grand Central is on 42nd Street between Park and Lexington Avenues. At this point in its path, Broadway is 1 very tiny block east of 7th Avenue. This area -- the tiny block between 7th Avenue and Broadway at 42nd Street -- is Times Square. So Broadway is 4 blocks west of Grand Central: Park Avenue ---> Madison Avenue ---> 5th Avenue ---> 6th Avenue ---> Broadway. So yes, Grand Central is near Broadway, unless you're going to a cross street on Broadway that is far from 42nd Street. Broadway runs diagonally through virtually the entire length of Manhattan (over 13 miles).