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LordChaz Posted 15 years ago
Grammar

Proper Noun Vs Common Noun & Capitalization

This may be an odd one but it has sparked a conversation between me & my friends and I would like a ruling from an outside party.

The term "punk rock" I assume is a common noun and would not be capitalized. But could it not be used in certain context in which it becomes a proper noun and therefore require capitalization? If so, could someone please give me an example or two of sentences in which it should be capitalized?

I thank you all in advance for any light that you can shed on this for me.

Chaz
  

Top answer

LordChaz The term "punk rock" I assume is a common noun and would not be capitalized. Correct. LordChaz But could it not be used in certain context in which it becomes a proper noun and therefore require capitalization?

  • LordChaz The term "punk rock" I assume is a common noun and would not be capitalized.
  • Correct.
  • LordChaz But could it not be used in certain context in which it becomes a proper noun and therefore require capitalization?
  • If Mr.
  • and Mrs.
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2 Answers
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LordChazThe term "punk rock" I assume is a common noun and would not be capitalized.
Correct.

LordChazBut could it not be used in certain context in which it becomes a proper noun and therefore require capitalization?
If Mr. and Mrs. Rock named a child of theirs Punk, its full name would be Punk Rock.

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Hi;

Welcome to the Forums!

You are right that genres of music (jazz, rock, blues,...) are not capitalized.

If it were in a title ( article, book, movie), then it would be capitalized.

It would also be capitalized as place name (this is one from Google)

Punk Rock

Prescott National Forest,

Humboldt, AZ 86322

We visited Punk Rock

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