Evelyn, Mt. Everest, Ernest.
elves evergreens Emmanuel
No. Country names are proper nouns and we don't use the before proper nouns eg the Paris.
Crayola crayons
Examples of common people nouns starting with L are:ladylandlordlawyerleaderlesseeliarlibrarianlieutenantExamples of proper people nouns starting with L are:LanceLaneLeonLeonardLeroyLewisLionelLuke
Nouns functioning as adjectives to describe a noun are called attributive nouns. Some examples of nouns to describe a young girl that start with M are:math girlmall girlmarimba girlmango girlMelbourne girlmalamute girl
Examples of nouns that start with E are:earedgeeducationeggegoegretelevatoremperoreternityEuropeExamples of verbs that start with E are:easeeatemployentertaineraseerodeestimateevolveexamineexist
Three proper nouns that start with V:Venezuela'Valerie' by Amy WinehouseVanity Fair (magazine)
Utah
All proper nouns start with a capital letter.
Some abstract nouns that start with E are:easeeducationelementeminenceemotionempireenigmaerrorexcellenceexcitementexcuseexercise
Some proper nouns that start with the letter "F" include France, Ferrari, and Ford.
Examples of proper nouns that start with A are:Abraham Lincoln"Alice in Wonderland"American IdolAnchor Hocking Glass CorporationAnchorage, AlaskaAngel Soft Bath TissueArizonaAtlantic OceanAudiAustraliaAttila the HunAzerbaijan
Abstract nouns are sometimes called 'special noun', so I am using that interpretation of the term. Proper nouns are names of people, places, things, or titles. Some proper, abstract nouns that start with R and E are:Reason Magazine and Reason Online, published by the Reason FoundationRealtor Magazine, published by the National Association of Realtors'Respect' by Aretha FranklinRegal Entertainment Group, Knoxville, TN'Rear Window' (1954), Jimmy Stewart and Grace Kelly'Reefer Madness' (1938)Revelation Baptist Church, Cincinnati, OHRetribution Mine, Juab County, UT
South Dakota is a proper noun. Proper nouns are specific and unique. They always start with a capital letter. Common nouns are more general in nature.
· Romania · Russia · Rwanda
· Romania · Russia · Rwanda
In Dutch, proper nouns are capitalized, while regular nouns are not capitalized unless they start a sentence or form part of a title.