Prize can be a noun or a verb
"Trophy"?, they are given as a prize.
Almost any noun that is not a word for a person is a noun for a thing.Examples:tree is a more exact noun for a thing; an elm is a more exact noun for tree.food is a more exact noun for a thing; meat is a more exact noun for food; hamburger is a more exact noun for meat.bridge is a more exact noun for a thing; suspension bridge is a more exact noun for bridge; Golden Gate Bridge is a more exact noun for suspension bridge.
Yes, the Nobel Peace Prize is a noun, a compound, proper noun, the name of a specific thing. All of the words of a proper noun are capitalized.
The exact word for a prize that someone gets for something they have achieved is "award."
Exact is an adjective; location is a noun.
Yes, "prize" is a common noun. Common nouns are non-specific, general terms for people, places, things, or ideas. In this case, "prize" refers to a general concept rather than a specific, unique item. It is not capitalized unless it is part of a proper noun.
The exact noun for wind is "air in natural motion."
The word carrot is a common noun, a singular, concrete noun. Carrot is also an exact noun for the general noun vegetable.
Proper noun
An exact noun for the word animal is a specific animal; for example:catdogcamelhawkMore specific nouns for animal are:liondingodromedaryred tail hawk
I think that "vessel" could be the word you are looking for. "exact noun" "tupperware" could infact be the answer, given German Sheperd is considered exact noun for "dog" (found this after first answer)
No, assistant is a noun. A common noun to be exact.
The exact noun for the pronoun "I" is the name of the person speaking. The pronoun "I" takes the place of the noun (name) for the person speaking as the subject of a sentence or a clause.