Yes, the compound noun Great Lakes or The Great Lakes is a proper noun, the name of a specific region, the name of a specific group.
Yes,Beacause Great Lakes is a proper noun!
Yes,Beacause Great lakes is a proper noun!
As a rule, Great Lakes is capitalized, yes.
Peter the Great it is the name of a particular individual, it is a proper noun. A proper noun is always capitalized.
Lake would not be capitalized unless it begins a sentence, as in this sentence. Or if it is part of the name of a lake such as the Great Lakes.
The possessive form of the proper noun Minnesota is Minnesota's.Example: Minnesota's license plates say, "Land of 10,000 Lakes".Note: The noun Minnesota is a proper noun, the name of a specific place. A proper noun is always capitalized.
Yes, Lake Erie is one of the five Great Lakes.The others are Superior, Michigan, Huron, and Ontario.The term 'The Great Lakes' and the names of the lakes are proper nouns. Proper noun are always capitalized.
The word British is a proper adjective describing a noun as of or from Britain. A proper adjective as well as a proper noun is always capitalized.
To make a common noun into a proper noun, you capitalize the first letter of the word. For example, "city" becomes "City" when referring to a specific city like New York. The capitalization distinguishes the specific entity from the general concept.
The noun 'British' is a concrete, proper noun as a word for the people of Great Britain.The word 'British' is also a proper adjective, used to describe a noun as of or from Great Britain.Note: A proper noun and a proper adjective is always capitalized.
No, the word 'somebody' is NOT a noun.The word 'someone' is an indefinite pronoun , a word that takes the place of a noun for an unknown or unnamed person.
No, the word 'seventeen' is a common noun, a general word for a number or an amount.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing; for example, Seventeen magazine or Seventeen Lakes(development) in Roanoke TX.