When using the noun "Brother" as a noun of address, it is a proper noun as a word for the specific person you are addressing.
The noun "brother" is a common noun as a general word for any male sibling.
Sometimes! Direct address can be anywhere in the sentence -beginning, middle, and end!Examples:Beginning: 'Jennifer, please do your homework.'Middle: 'After you clean your room, Caitlyn, we can eat some ice cream.'End: 'Which dog would you like, Joe?'By the way, the direct address is 90% of the time a name, except when someone says: Whatchamacallit, get me a burger!
It is brother. The word brother is a singular, common noun; a word for a male person.
Yes, the word 'brother' is a noun.
The word 'brother' is a noun; a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a person.
No, the noun brother-in-law is a compound noun, a noun made up of two or more words that forms a noun with a meaning of its own.A possessive noun is a noun that indicates that something in the sentence belongs to that noun. A possessive noun is indicated by an apostrophe -s ('s) or just an apostrophe (') at the end of the noun.The possessive form of the noun brother-in-law is brother-in-law's.Example: My brother-in-law's name is Stephen.
Yes, the word 'brother' is a noun, a word for a person.
The word brother is a singular noun. The plural form would be brothers.
The word 'brother' is a noun, a word for a male sibling; a word for a person.
The word brother is a noun.
The noun 'brother' is a singular noun.The plural noun is 'brothers'.
Brother is a noun.
The term 'her brother', is a possessive pronoun with a common noun. The word 'her' is a possessive pronoun, a word that replaces a noun (a female person or a name) and indicates that something belongs to that noun. The word 'brother' is a noun, it's noun that belongs to the possessive 'her'.