"River" is a common noun, as it refers to a general type of geographical feature. However, "Nevada River" would be a proper noun if it refers to a specific river named Nevada; in that case, both words together identify a unique entity. Without additional context, "Nevada" on its own is also a proper noun, as it refers to a specific state in the United States.
The word state is a singular, common noun. It is used as a concrete and an abstract noun and also as a proper noun; for example: I live in the state of Nevada. I exist in a state of confusion. Hillary Clinton is the Secretary of State.
The word state is a singular, common noun. It is used as a concrete and an abstract noun and also as a proper noun; for example: I live in the state of Nevada. I exist in a state of confusion. Hillary Clinton is the Secretary of State.
That is a "snowfall" as a noun nevado, nevada (adjectives) = snow-capped
How will it "be" what? need a noun here.
Common noun
Nevada IS a proper noun. It is the name of the 36th state of the USA (the capital N is a bit of a clue ;))
common
Pea is a common noun, and peas is the plural...still a common noun.
The noun torpedo is a common noun, a word for any torpedo of any kind.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, thing, or a title; for example:Torpedo, PA 16340Torpedo Road, Stafford Township, NJSierra Nevada Torpedo (beverage), Sierra Nevada Brewing Co."Torpedo Run", 1958 movie with Glenn Ford and Ernest Borgnine"Torpedo", a novel by Ray Verola
A common noun.
Most definitely a common noun.