Generally it is used as a title, but it ask friends on the usage. Mother can be used as a title in the case of female religious leaders, and in titling the mother of a household.
Your mother is a common noun. A common noun becomes a proper noun when it is the name of a person, place thing, or a title; for example:Dear Mother,Mother TheresaMother Wore Tights (1947)Mother's Rolled Oats
A proper noun is the name or title of a specific person, place, or thing. When the noun 'mother' is the title of a specific person, such as your mother or Mother Teresa, it is a proper noun and it is capitalized.The noun 'mother' is a common noun as a general word for the female parent of anyone or anything. A common noun is capitalized only when it's the first word in a sentence.
mother's name is the correct possessive form
Your title page should contain a header with your title, your name, and the name of your school. The purdue online writing lab website has a good example.
No, there is no proper noun in the example sentence. A proper noun is the name of a person, place, thing, or a title. SO, if you said "Dr. Jones and mother are proud of your sister Jane," you would have several proper nouns-- Dr. Jones (the name of the veterinarian) and Jane (the name of your sister). The sentence you have given has lots of nouns, but none of them are proper nouns.
Teresa was the name she chose upon becoming a nun. The title 'Mother' was a title given by the Sisters of Loreto to all nuns in the order.
In the Sisters of Loreto, once a young lady takes her final vows she is given a new name preceeded by the title of 'Mother.'
No. The person whose name is on the legal title must insure the vehicle. The mother-in-law should be rated as the driver, but if your name is on the title, you must insure it.
no
No, the title 'Blessed' was given her when she was beatified.
The Countess of Huntingdon: She is only known by her noble title, her personal name is not recorded anywhere.
she is a co owner of the vehicle. Who ever has the vehicle will need the other signature to sell it. in most states you can register the vehicle in either name or both.
A vehicle with a lien holder named on the title cannot be traded, transferred or sold without the title being cleared by the lien holder.
WHAT IS THE NAME ON THE TITLE
No, the noun 'mother' is a common noun, a general word for any female parent of anyone or anything. A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, thing, or a title; for example Mother Teresa.
Mother the wardrobe is full of infantrymen......that is the title :)
Mother is a titled conferred on members of the Loreto Order when they become sisters. Mother Teresa originally wanted to take the name Therese after terese of Lisieux but that name was already taken by another member of the order. She chose instead to take the Spanish version of the name - Teresa.