Germany is the proper noun for the place; a proper noun is a name for a person place, thing, or a title.
No, Germany is a proper noun.
Proper
Yes, Berlin is a proper noun as it refers to a specific city in Germany.
That is the correct spelling of the proper noun Germany (a country in western Europe).
The word German can be a proper noun or a proper adjective. The noun refers to someone in or from Germany (a German), or the language spoken there. *as a genealogy term, it does not use a capital G
Germany is a proper noun, but it could be made an adjective by adding an ish to it.
No, "juicy" is not a proper noun. It is an adjective that describes something with a lot of liquid or moisture.
The proper noun anagram is Germany.
Georgia, Greg, Garth, Germany
"Park Avenue" is a proper noun, because it is a place. Proper nouns like this should always be capitalized.
The most likely word is the proper noun, the European country of Germany.
No, Berlin is not a verb. Berlin is the capital city of Germany. Verbs are words used to describe an action, state, or occurrence.