The noun 'dragon' is a concrete noun as a word for a type of lizard. The noun 'dragon' is an abstract noun as a word for a mythical creature.
Dragon is a common noun.
Yes, Comodo Dragon is a proper noun
No, the noun dragon is a common noun, a word for any dragon of any kind.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, thing, or a title; for example:Dr. David M. Dragon MD, Baton Rouge, LADragonville, VA 23085Green Dragon (eco-friendly clothing), Los Angeles, CA"The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo", a novel by Stieg Larrson
yes
It depends on the dragon gods
There are three nouns. Cultures, dragon, and snake are nouns.
The word 'dragonfly' is a compound word made up of the noun 'dragon' and the noun 'fly', to form dragonfly, a noun with a meaning of its own.
There is no standard collective noun for bearded dragons.Because bearded dragons do like to sun themselves:the collective noun for lizards will work: a lounge of bearded dragons; a lounge of bearded dragonsthe collective noun for crocodiles will work: a bask of bearded dragons; a bask of bearded dragons
A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thingA proper noun for the common noun 'girl' is Hannah Montana, Shirley Temple, 'The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo', or 'The Little Match Girl'.
world, monster, dragon In English, nouns can be recognized by the fact that you could put the article, "the" with them: the world, the monster, the dragon. ("The best" has a somewhat different meaning in this case.)
"Dragon's treasures" is an English equivalent of the Spanish phrase tesoros de dragón." The masculine plural noun, preposition, and masculine singular noun translate literally into English as "treasures of (a) dragon." The pronunciation will be "tey-SO-ro-sthey dra-GON" in Spanish.