Yes.Mayflower is a proper noun (The name of the ship Pilgrims sailed to America on)
As well as Plymouth (The place the Pilgrims supposedly landed.)
Word processors contain most common proper nouns. But it may not include unusual proper nouns.
The Mayflower landed in Plymouth, Massachusetts, on December 21, 1620.
The common noun is museum; the proper noun is May.
A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing. Common nouns may be capitalized only at the beginning of a sentence, but that does not make them proper nouns, it just makes them capitalized common nouns.
The nouns in the sentence are:Louisa May Alcott (proper noun)author (common noun)
The common nouns are athlete, end, and game. The acronym UGA may be an abbreviation for the proper noun University of Georgia, Athens; or perhaps it may be the proper noun Uga, the name of a town in Nigeria.
If there are no proper nouns in a sentence, it may lack specific names or references to unique entities, making it more general and less precise in identifying particular individuals, places, or things. The sentence may still convey meaning but would be less detailed or distinctive without proper nouns.
Names, as proper nouns, do not have opposites. The meaning of a name may have.
The word May (capital M) is a proper noun as the name of a specific month or the name of a specific person. A proper noun is always capitalized.The word may (lower case m) is a verb or auxiliary verb.
A proper noun that rhymes with hairy is Mary.
I think you are asking what document the were given by England, if it's that its called the May Flower compact
Yes, Kate is a proper noun.Proper nouns (also called proper names) are nouns representing unique entities (such as London, Venusor Kate), as distinguished from common nouns which describe a class of entities (such as city, planet or person). Proper nouns are not normally preceded by an article (a, the) or other limiting modifier (such as any or some), and are used to denote a particular person, place, or thing without regard to any descriptive meaning the word or phrase may have.