No, Dinosaur National Monument is a noun, a proper noun, the name of a specific place on the Colorado Utah border. A proper noun is always capitalized.
A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence. The pronoun that takes the place of the noun Dinosaur National Monument is 'it'.
Example: We visited the Dinosaur National Monument on our trip. It contains many dinosaur fossils.
No, the noun dinosaur is a common noun, a word for any kind of dinosaur anywhere.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing; for example:Dino, Fred Flinstone's pet dinosaurRex, character in the movie "Toy Story"Dinosaur National Monument, UtahDinosaur Bar-B-Que, Syracuse, NY"Dinosaur Lake", a novel by Kathryn Meyer Griffith
No, Australian is a proper adjective, a word used to describe a noun as of or from Australia.There is no type of pronoun called a 'proper pronoun'.
Proper
There is a monument in Paris. (monument is common, Paris is proper)
Its proper name is the Washington Monument. Its shape is an obelisk.
Its proper name is the Washington Monument. Its shape is an obelisk.
The nouns in the sentence are:people (plural, common, concrete noun; subject of the sentence)family (singular, common, concrete noun; object of the preposition 'from')Washington Monument (singular, proper, concrete noun; direct object)Washington D.C. (singular, proper, concrete noun; object of the preposition 'in')The pronoun in the sentence is our (possessive adjective, describes the noun 'family') Note: The word 'several' can be an indefinite pronoun. However, in this sentence it functions as an adjective describing the noun 'family'.Example use as a pronoun: Several of our family have visited...
No, you is a pronoun.
She went to see the Eiffel Tower. She is the pronoun, and Eiffel is the Proper Adjective.
No, the only 'proper' pronoun is the personal pronoun'I'. At least it's the only pronoun that's always capitalized.
neither
No. It is a proper noun.