Yes, Reebok is a proper noun.
A proper noun is the name of a person, place, or thing. Reebok is the name of a company, a thing.
readbook
Reebok can be both a common noun (as in a small South African antelope with a brownish-grey coat, a long slender neck, and short straight horns) or a proper noun (as in the name of the sports-clothing manufacturer)
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The common nouns are shoe, company, manufacturer, or brand.
If it is the name of a specific place or thing such as a newspaper business, it is considered to be a proper noun.
No. As a noun, harvest would be considered a common noun.
No, usually Africa is considered a Proper Noun.
No, unless it is the name of a person.
no, and isn't it reebok?
In British English, Monday is considered a proper noun.
No, I is a personal pronoun.
The noun 'food' is a common noun described by the proper adjective 'Mexican'. As the compound noun 'Mexican food', it can be considered a common noun, a word for any Mexican food of any kind, or it can be considered a proper noun as a word for the food of a specific national origin.