The common noun for the Broadway is street.
when a show is "off Broadway it means that the show is still playing, but no longer playing in a Broadway theatre.This is not actually true. A show that is running off Broadway may or may not have ever been on Broadway. Many shows start off-broadway and get picked up to move into a Broadway theatre. And many more ONLY run off-broadway.
Most people think the difference is one is ON Broadway and one is NOT. This is not true. There are many Broadway shows that aren't literally on Broadway. The main difference between a Broadway show and an off-broadway show is the size of the house (number of seats). The tickets are also cheaper and the production value usually cheaper.
I believe as of now its Anything Goes. I could be wrong but thats what it is to my knowledge.
the opera
A broadway show i made up and new and a broadway play i a play of something like Annie or High School Musical.
The noun show is a count noun: one show, two shows. Example: We went to New York to see all the shows on Broadway.
Yes, the term 'TV show' is a noun; a singular, common, compound noun; a word for a thing.
The noun 'route' is a common noun, for example, This is the route to Boston. Any common noun becomes a proper noun when it is used for a specific person, place, thing, or a title such as US Route 66 or the TV show 'Route 66'.
It is very difficult to get free Broadway show tickets in New York for free since all Broadway show tickets cost money. The only way to get free Broadway show tickets is if a friend, family member or stranger decides to give one a ticket for free.
Yes, "mine" is a possessive pronoun used to show ownership. It is not a common noun, which is a general, non-specific noun.
Annnie was a Broadway show.
The common noun 'TV show' becomes a proper noun when it is the name of a specific TV show, such as '30 Rock', or the word 'TV show' is used as the specific name or title such as the 'TV Show Digest'.
Yes, the noun 'samples' is a common noun, the plural form of the noun 'sample', a general word for a small part or quantity intended to show what the whole is like.
when a show is "off Broadway it means that the show is still playing, but no longer playing in a Broadway theatre.This is not actually true. A show that is running off Broadway may or may not have ever been on Broadway. Many shows start off-broadway and get picked up to move into a Broadway theatre. And many more ONLY run off-broadway.
American Idol is the name of a show so it is a proper noun.
Oklahoma is a proper noun, as it is the name of a place, and also the name of a show.
Most people think the difference is one is ON Broadway and one is NOT. This is not true. There are many Broadway shows that aren't literally on Broadway. The main difference between a Broadway show and an off-broadway show is the size of the house (number of seats). The tickets are also cheaper and the production value usually cheaper.