Common vs. Proper Nouns: Simple Rules & Examples

A common noun is any general person, place, or thing: city, teacher, phone. A proper noun names a specific one and always starts with a capital letter: Paris, Ms. Johnson, WhatsApp.

We slip up because spell-check ignores lowercase “iPhone” in the middle of a sentence, autocorrect turns “amazon” into a verb, and group chats casually write “white house.” The rules feel fussy until a recruiter spots “google” on a résumé.

Key Differences

Capital letter = proper noun. No capital, generic idea = common noun. “River” could be any river; “River Thames” is one specific ribbon of water.

Examples and Daily Life

Text a friend: “Meet at the café on Main Street.” Café = common; Main Street = proper. Email your CEO: “Book flights via Delta, stay at Hilton, then email report on Friday.” All three proper nouns signal exact brands and days.

Is “mom” ever a proper noun?

Yes, when you replace her name: “I’ll ask Mom.” If you say “my mom,” keep it lowercase.

Do company job titles get capitals?

Only when paired with a name: “Chief Executive Officer Tim Cook.” Otherwise, “the CEO approved it.”

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