Australian is a proper noun that can be used to describe 'kangaroo'
No. It is a noun, but not a proper noun.And the kangaroo is not the national symbol of Australia. Australia does not have a national faunal symbol.
The term 'red kangaroo' is a common noun. It would only be a proper noun if it was part of a proper name or a title, such as The Red Kangaroo Cafe.
No, kangaroo is a singular, common, concrete noun.A common noun can become a proper noun if it is used for the name of a specific person, place, thing, or a title, such as KangaROOS, the shoes with pockets, The Kangaroo Conservation Park in Dawsonville Georgia, or the movie 'Kangaroo Jack'.
The noun kangaroo is a common noun, a word for any kangaroo.A proper noun is the name of a person, place, thing, or a title; for example:Captain Kangaroo, TV personalityKangaroo Island SA, AustraliaKangaroo House Bed & Breakfast, Eastbound, WAKangaroo Pouch Ltd. (children's clothing), Atlanta, GA
Yes, the noun Australia is a proper noun, the name of a specific place.Common nouns are the general words for people, places, or things. Examples of common nouns for the proper noun Australia are country or commonwealth.
Yes, Australia is a noun, a proper noun because it names a specific place.
Australia is the proper noun in the sentence, the name of a country.
Examples of common nouns for the proper noun Australia are:placecountrycommonwealthcontinentland mass
No, it's a proper noun.
Yes it is a noun but it could be a proper noun.
The proper name for the largest kangaroo in Tasmanian is Tasmanian forester kangaroo. It lives in open woodlands and bushland in the island of Tasmania, Australia's southernmost state.
The word 'Australian' is a noun, a proper noun; a word for a resident of or someone from Australia; a word for a person.The word 'Australian' is also an proper adjective, a word that describers something as of or from Australia.