Yes, "traffic police" is a common noun. It refers to a general category of law enforcement officers responsible for enforcing traffic laws, rather than a specific name or title. Common nouns are not capitalized unless they begin a sentence or are part of a title.
The word police is a common noun, a word for any police.A common noun can become a proper noun if it is used for the name of a specific person, place, thing, or a title, such as the New York City Police Department or the movies 'Police Academy' and 'Police Academy 2'.
Yes, the noun 'traffic' is a common noun; a general word for the passage of people or vehicles along routes of transportation; a general word for the commercial exchange of goods (trade); a general word for the moving passengers and cargo through a transportation system; a general word for the messages or signals transmitted through a communications system; a word for any traffic of any kind.The word 'traffic' is also a verb: traffic, traffics, trafficking, trafficked.
Yes, the word 'traffic jam' is a noun, a singular, common, compound, concrete noun; a word for the group of vehicles waiting behind something that is blocking the road; a word for a thing.
The word police is a common noun, a word for any police of any kind, anywhere.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, thing, or a title, such as the New York City Police Department, The Royal Canadian Mounted Police, or the movie 'Police Academy'.
No, the word traffic is a noun.
a noun
No, the noun 'police' is an aggregate noun, a word representing an indefinite number of elements or parts. The word 'police' is an uncountable noun with no singular form.
Yes, the word 'police officer' is a noun, a compound noun; a word for a person.
The noun 'traffic' is an uncountable, commonnoun.The noun 'traffic' is a concrete noun as a word for pedestrians, ships, planes, or vehicles moving along a route; a crowded mass of vehicles.The noun 'traffic' is an abstract noun as a word for the business of bartering or buying and selling; import and export trade; illegal or disreputable commercial activity.The word 'traffic' is also a verb: traffic, traffics, trafficking, trafficked.
Yes, the word 'traffic lights' is a noun, a plural, compound noun; a word for things.
Yes, the word 'police' is a noun, a word for a body of government employees responsible for law enforcement and crime prevention.The noun 'police' is a word for an agency or a group of people, a word for a thing.The noun 'police' is an uncountable (mass) noun, a type of aggregate noun, a word that represents an indefinite number of elements or parts.The word 'police' is also a verb: police, polices, policing, policed.
Well, darling, "police" can be both a common noun and a proper noun depending on how it's used. When you're talking about law enforcement in general, it's a common noun. But when you're referring to a specific police department or organization, like the New York City Police Department, then it's a proper noun. So, in short, it can go both ways, just like a good martini. Cheers!