No, Germany is a proper noun.
Yes, Berlin is a proper noun: the name of a person, place, or thing. It is the capital city of Germany.
Proper
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.
The proper noun anagram is Germany.
Juicy is an adjective. A proper noun is the name of something like a person or a country e.g. Mary or Germany.
Georgia, Greg, Garth, Germany
Yes, "German Shepherd" is a proper noun as it refers to a specific breed of dog that was originally developed in Germany for herding and guarding purposes.
The most likely word is the proper noun, the European country of Germany.
No, the noun 'Germany' is a singular, proper noun, the name of a country (there is only one).A collective noun is a noun used to group two or more people or things taken together as one whole in a descriptive way, for example a flock of birds or a crowd of people.