No, the noun 'astronauts' is a common noun, the plural form of the noun 'astronaut', a general word for someone who is trained to travel in a spacecraft.
A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing. A proper noun for the common noun 'astronauts' is the names of the astronauts.
Proper
Names of countries are always proper nouns.
The noun 'France' is a singular, concrete, proper noun; the name of a specific country; a word for a place.A proper noun is always capitalized.
No, the noun France is a proper noun, the name of a specific place; the common noun is country.
The common noun for the proper noun 'Nile' is river.Note: A proper noun is always capitalized.
Yes, the noun 'astronaut' is a common noun, a general word for any astronaut anywhere.
The possessive form of the singular noun astronaut is astronaut's.Example: The astronaut's photo was on the front page of the newspaper.
Yes, the word astronaut is a common noun, a word for any astronaut anywhere.A proper noun is a word for a specific person, place, thing, or a title; for example:American astronaut Alan Shepherd and Soviet cosmonaut Yuri GagarinUnited States Astronaut Hall of Fame, Titusville, FLAstronaut Street, Lakeport, TX or Astronaut Avenue, Las Vegas, NV"Astronaut Training", a novel by Ronald C. Thompson
No astronaut is not a collective noun since it is not referring to a group of people
No, the word 'astronaut' is a noun.
The word astronaut is a noun, a word for a profession of people. The word astronaut is singular, common, abstract noun.
No, the word 'astronaut' is a noun, a word for a person.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.The noun 'astronaut' can be replaced by the third-person, personal pronouns he or she as a subject, and him or her as an object in a sentence.Examples:The astronaut handled the emergency just as she had been trained.When the astronaut completed the run, the trainer gavehim a rest.
The possessive form of the noun astronaut is astronaut's(-aut's).
Pencil proper or common noun
Exxon is a proper noun
proper noun
As a name of a road , Park Avenue', it is a proper noun, and both words star with a capital letter. However, when used separately, as 'the park, or 'the avenue', they are common nouns and so not need a capital letter.