The term 'Grandfather Paul' is a compound, proper noun, a word for a specific person.
The noun 'grandfather' is a compound noun on its own, a combination of the adjective 'grand' and the noun 'father', combined to form a word with its own meaning.
A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing. The noun 'Paul' is a proper noun as the name of a specific person. The common noun 'grandfather' is a proper noun as a name you call a specific person.
The noun 'Grandfather Paul' is a singular, concrete, compound, proper noun, the title and name of a specific person.
It would be grandfathers' because the possessive of all English plural nouns ending in -s is formed by adding an apostrophe.Example: I'm having a display case made for two of my grandfathers' medals.
The singular possessive form of the word "grandfather" is "grandfather's."
The possessive form of the noun grandfather is grandfather's.Example: I'm spending the weekend at my grandfather's farm.
Grandpa is a common noun. Proper nouns are the unique names of people, places, or things. Common nouns are the words for general things. If a common noun is part of a name, it becomes a proper noun. Pronouns always replace proper and common nouns.
The noun 'Grandfather Paul' is a singular, concrete, compound, proper noun, the title and name of a specific person.
The nouns are:Paul Bunyanherotales
Four nouns for dad: father, grandfather, man, parent. Four nouns for son: boy, child, offspring, person.
The nouns in the sentence are:thingsgrandfathertempervoice
Sean Paul's paternal grandfather was Jewish. Sean Paul was raised a Catholic.
Paul Eiding
its grande :)
They are blah and blah
The words green and grandfather are both nouns. The word quickly is an adverb. The word also is an adverb, but it can be used as a conjunction. The word driving is a verb.
Paul Baran is known to the grandfather of the Internet. He pioneered the development of computer networks and was one of the two independent inventors of packet switched computer networking.
The nouns are 1) green, 3) grandfather, and 4) driving (can be a gerund, a verbal noun depending on use in a sentence).
Examples of traditionally hyphenated compound nouns are:blue-greenfive-year-oldjack-in-the-boxjack-in-the-pulpitmother-in-law, father-in-law, sister-in-law, brother-in-lawsix-packT-shirt (or tee-shirt)x-ray