The proper use of the verb forms 'has been' and 'have been' is:
Examples:
John has been at work. Mary has beenshopping.
The book has been in my locker the whole time.
John and Mary have been out all morning. The Millers have been out all morning.
The books have been in my locker the whole time.
You can use "has been" with a singular proper noun and "have been" with plural proper nouns. For example, "She has been to Paris" (singular proper noun) and "They have been to London and Rome" (plural proper nouns).
Loud and soft are not proper adjectives. The easiest way to remember what proper adjectives are is that they are usually adjectives which are similar to their proper noun form. For example, Canada is a proper noun. Canadian, when used to describe a noun, such as, Canadian bacon, is the proper adjective.
The proper noun "Maestra" is an Italian and Spanish word that translates to "teacher" in English. It is often used as a formal or respectful way of addressing a female teacher or instructor.
To form a possessive noun from a common or proper noun, you typically add an apostrophe followed by the letter "s" ('s) if the noun is singular. If the noun is plural and already ends in "s," you can just add an apostrophe at the end. For example, "dog's bone" (singular) and "dogs' bones" (plural).
The possessive form of the proper noun 'Benjamin' is Benjamin's.Example: We're on our way to Benjamin's party.
One way to use "color" as a noun in a sentence is: "The artist used a vibrant palette of colors in the painting."
The word 'Norway' is a proper noun, the name of a country. A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing. A proper noun is always capitalized.
The noun Milky Way (capitalized) is a singular, proper, open spaced compound noun. It is a proper noun because it is the name of a specific galaxy (and one of my favorite candy bars).
"Have been" is used in present perfect continuous tense to indicate that an action started in the past and is still ongoing. For example, "I have been working on this project for two hours." "Have being" is not a correct phrase in English grammar. Use "have been" in situations requiring present perfect continuous tense.
It depends on the noun before the word 'that': There are cats that are evil... That cat is evil. If the noun associated with the word 'that' is plural, you would say 'that are' If the noun is singular, you would say 'that is'
The Milky Way is a proper noun. All proper nouns should be capitalised.
September is a PROPER noun. This is because it must be capitilized in a sentence. Names, months, holidays, weekdays, cities, and states are all proper nouns. Think of it this way: If you have to capitilize the first letter, its probably a proper noun.
There are no proper nouns in the sentence. The noun in the sentence, statues, is not the name of a specific statue.
Loud and soft are not proper adjectives. The easiest way to remember what proper adjectives are is that they are usually adjectives which are similar to their proper noun form. For example, Canada is a proper noun. Canadian, when used to describe a noun, such as, Canadian bacon, is the proper adjective.
no. a proper noun is a name for example like Michael or "Playdoh". a pronoun is a word used in place of a noun, like he, she, it, they, etc. the easiest way to tell the difference is that proper nouns start with a capitalized letter
The collective nouns are:a range of mountainsa chain of mountains.
September is a PROPER noun. This is because it must be capitilized in a sentence. Names, months, holidays, weekdays, cities, and states are all proper nouns. Think of it this way: If you have to capitilize the first letter, its probably a proper noun.
It's a proper noun, so yes.