The noun 'continents' (the plural form of 'continent') is a common noun, a general word for a large mass of land.
The noun 'continents' is a concrete noun, a word for a physical thing.
The noun 'Pangaea' is a proper noun; the name of the hypothetical supercontinent that broke apart to form the continents we know today; the name of a specific place.
Yes, "Seven Continents" should be capitalized because it is a proper noun referring to a specific group of landmasses on Earth.
Yes, just like any country, state, or city.
The noun 'Pennsylvania' is a singular, concrete, proper noun, the name of a specific place.
The common noun for the proper noun Kansas is state.
The noun loyalty is a common, abstract noun.
The word pilot is a common noun, a word for any pilot.A common noun becomes a proper noun when it is the name of a specific person, place, thing, or a title. For example:Pilot Knob Road, Fort Ann NYPilot Food Mart, Knoxville TNPilot Pen Corporation'The Pilot' by James Fenimore Cooper
A proper noun for the common noun 'slave' is the name of a slave, such as Nat Turner or Sojourner Truth. The abstract noun form of the concrete noun 'slave' is slavery.
The plural, proper noun 'Americans' is a concrete noun as a word for the people of the United States or the people of the American continents. People are physical beings.
Three kinds of nouns are: singular or plural common or proper concrete or abstract
Common,proper,abstract,concrete,countable,uncountable,collective
It is a place, and a proper noun. It is a concrete noun that you can see and touch when you are there.
The common noun phoenix is an abstract noun, a word for a bird that exists in legend only. The proper noun Phoenix is a concrete noun, the name of a city in the state of Arizona.
Example sentences:1. A simple seamstress, Rosa Parks was an unlikely hero.seamstress, a common,concrete nounRosa Parks, a proper, concrete nounhero, a common, concrete noun2. The bottom of the Pacific is still a difficult place to explore. (words for places)bottom, a common, concrete nounPacific, a proper, concrete nounplace, a common, concrete noun3. My advice is to buy a car within your price range.advice, a common, abstract, uncountable nouncar, a common, concrete nounprice range, a common, abstract, compound noun4. The pavement on Main Street is full of cracks.pavement, a common, concrete, uncountable nounMain Street, a proper, concrete nouncracks, a common, concrete, plural noun5. I made the spaghetti according to mother's recipe.spaghetti, a common, concrete, uncountable nounmother's, a common, concrete, possessive nounrecipe, a common, concrete noun6. We watched the glassblower form a glass swan.glassblower, a common, concrete, compound nounglass, a common, concrete, uncountable, attributive nounswan, a common, concrete noun7. We waited for a turn on the exercise equipment.turn, a common, abstract nounexercise, a common, concrete, attributive nounequipment, a common, concrete, uncountable noun8. We could see the Eiffel Tower from the balconyof our hotel.Eiffel Tower, a proper, concrete, compound nounbalcony, a common, concrete nounhotel, a common, concrete9. The mob of angry protesters moved toward the courthouse.mob, a common, concrete, collective nounprotesters, a common, concrete, plural nouncourthouse, a common, concrete, compound noun10. This is the last sentence using types of nouns.sentence, a common, concrete nountypes, a common, abstract, plural nounnouns, a common, concrete, plural noun.
The proper noun Phoenix (city in Arizona) is a concrete noun. The common noun phoenix would be a mythological creature, which if encountered would also be a concrete noun.
Both concrete and abstract nouns are words for things. Both concrete and abstract nouns can be singular or plural. Both concrete and abstract nouns can be common nouns or proper nouns. Both concrete and abstract nouns function in a sentence as the subject of the sentence or clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.
If it is a proper name, it is a concrete noun.