Yes, a company name is a proper noun. A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing. A company is a thing.
The word 'business' is a noun and the word 'closing' is a gerund (the present participle of a verb that functions as a noun). The term 'business closing' can be considered a compound noun. Example:The business closing has been stressful for everyone.
The possessive form of "the meeting of the business man" is:"the business man's meeting".
DBA
Yes, the noun 'business' is a count noun.The plural form is businesses (one business or two businesses).
Common noun
If it is the name of a specific place or thing such as a newspaper business, it is considered to be a proper noun.
Company
The compound noun Bijou Theater is a proper noun, the name of a business or a building (real or fictional).
The compound noun Bijou Theater is a proper noun, the name of a business or a building (real or fictional).
The noun Burger King is a singular, proper noun; the name of a business.
No bonnet is not a proper noun, unless it happens to be used as a family name, or in a business name or story title.
Yes, the proper noun McDonald's is a possessive noun, it is a short form for "the restaurant of McDonald" (there was originally only one).
The word McDonald's is a proper noun, the name of a business. A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, thing, or a title. The name McDonald is a proper noun as the name of a person; McDonald's is a proper noun as the possessive form for the name of a person, the name of a business, or the name of a hamburger.
No, the compound noun 'Pizza Hut' is a proper noun, the name of a business and a corporation.A proper noun is the name of a person, place, or thing. Pizza Hut is a thing.
If it is the name of a specific place or thing such as a newspaper business, it is considered to be a proper noun.
"School" is generally considered a common noun unless it is part of a specific school's name, such as "Harvard Business School," in which case it would be a proper noun.