Yes, Britain is a noun. It is a proper noun for a country, a place.
The noun 'town' is a singular, common noun, concrete noun; a word for a place.
The common noun for the proper noun Kansas is state.
London is the capital city of Britain.
An abstract noun related to the noun 'neighbor' is neighborliness.
The abstract noun form for the concrete noun 'neighbor' is neighborliness.
As Britain is the name of a place. yes, it is a proper noun.
Britain is a proper noun.
The word British is a proper adjective describing a noun as of or from Britain. A proper adjective as well as a proper noun is always capitalized.
The proper adjective British describes a noun of or from the proper noun Britain.
The proper noun 'British' is a concrete noun as a word for the people of Great Britain, a word for physical people.The word 'British' is also a proper adjective, used to describe a noun as of or from Great Britain.
The proper noun is "Britain", referring generally to Great Britain or to historical England.
The possessive form is: Britain's worst balloonist.
Usually, but it can be a verb and in Britain, a noun.
The proper noun is Britain.The common nouns are people, weather, and time.
It is a proper noun, used to the refer to "the English" (the English people) or to the language English. It is a proper adjective when used to refer to England or Great Britain.
The spelling of the proper noun for a person from Britain (Great Britain, or UK) may be Briton.(The similar common word meaning to bring light is to brighten.)
The word 'knight' is both a noun and a verb.The noun 'knight' is a word for a man honored by a sovereign for merit and in Great Britain; a word for a chess piece.The verb 'knight' means to bestow the title on someone for merit.