User:EncycloPetey/English proper nouns

Summary: Linguists recognize a special subset of nouns called "proper nouns". These nouns have certain characteristics, properties, and patterns of usage which set them apart from "common nouns" in many languages. This appendix discusses both the general properties of all proper nouns and the particular characteristics of English proper nouns.

Practical characteristics
A proper noun is first of all a kind of noun. Like other nouns, a proper noun may label a person, place, or thing, and may label a concrete object or an abstraction. Most proper nouns refer to a specific person (e.g. Julius Caesar), a specific place (e.g. Istanbul), a specific institution or organization (e.g. the Red Cross), or a specific event (e.g. the Renaissance).

In English, there are a few typical characteristics which permit proper nouns to be recognized. A proper noun typically:
 * ...has its initial letter capitalized.
 * ...is not used in the plural.
 * ...is not preceded by adjectives, articles, numerals, demonstratives, or other modifiers.

Although each of these is a typical feature of proper nouns, none of them apply universally. Not only do each of these typical characteristics have important exceptions (discussed later in this appendix), but also none of these features are exclusive to proper nouns. For example, although proper nouns are usually capitalized, a few of them are not, and many common nouns are also capitalized.

What makes a noun "proper"?
A philosophical consideration of proper nouns finds three properties. Being philosophical, these properties are abstract and are not as easily applied or demonstrated as practical characteristics of use may be. Nevertheless, each of these three properties distinguishes a proper noun from a common noun, and taken together they provide a theoretical basis for determining which kind of noun a word is. Unlike the practical characteristics, these three philosophical properties may be applied to other languages, where the conventions of capitalization and grammar differ from those used in English.

Uniqueness of referent
First among the properties of a proper noun is that the referent, the entity that the word identifies or denotes, is unique.

Common nouns identify an object as belonging to a class of similar objects. Thus, the referent of a common noun is not unique. Proper nouns identify a specific thing, one that is unique. The definition will exclude the possibility that another referent may exist, whether real, fictitious, or even hypothetical. The referent of a proper noun is by definition unique.

This does not mean that every noun applied to a unique item is de facto a proper noun. When the telephone was invented, there was only one such device in existence. However, telephone was still a common noun because the definition of a telephone did not exclude the possibility that others might exist at some point. The word "telephone" identifies a class of similar items rather than a unique entity.

The word Albanian (when referring to the language) is a unique entity, and is therefore a proper noun. On the other hand, Albanian (when referring to a person from Albania) is a common noun, since the person so labelled belongs to a class of similarly identified individuals. It is therefore possible for the same word to function as a proper noun in one sense, but as a common noun in a different sense.

Specificity of label
Second among the properties of a proper noun, and closely tied to the first, is the specificity of the label.


 * serve as a proper name of a specific entity (p328)
 * label for unique item; moniker

This property arises from the way in which proper nouns are used to distinguish one particular item from all other similar ones.

In short, the need to identify individual persons has led to the widespread use of proper nouns, such as Alexander, to name people. But while Bucephalus (the horse of Alexander the Great) was gifted with a relatively well-known proper name, most such names of horses are unknown outside of those who care for them, ride them, or otherwise have a need to identify one horse from among the others.

Linguists include two additional aspects: definiteness and referentiality. (Finegan 202-205) Proper nouns are definite, meaning that a speaker may "assume that the listener can identify the referent." A listener will understand that the label applies to a particular entity, and can determine which entity is meant. Proper nouns are also referential, meaning that it applies to a particular entity and not to anything else. These two aspects are independent of each other, and it is possible for certain kinds of words to be only definite or only referential.

Does not impart connotation or attributes
Third


 * Do not carry meaning other than as a label for a specific object (signify a subject only, and not an attribute or connotation)
 * Do not translate

I. v. 2.
 * ...proper names have strictly no meaning; they are mere marks for individual objects.

Borderline cases

 * Days of the week
 * Festivals and Holidays
 * Nobel Prize (see Tea Room)
 * null set
 * universe (inconsistent caps), multiverse - see Gribbin & Hawking
 * wines
 * games

A word about "proper names"
The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language distinguishes between a proper noun and a proper name. One key point of distinction is that a proper noun is always a single word, and is always proper, such as: Mohammad, England, or Neptune. In contrast, a proper name may either be such a proper noun or a collocation of any nouns, adjectives, or other words assembled to function as a name, such as: John Milton, South Africa, or the Hundred Years' War. Such proper names thus behave more like phrases than words. However, this distinction is of more value to the linguist than the average user of a dictionary, so this distinction between proper noun and proper name is not made on Wiktionary. Here, proper names are treated together with their single-word counterparts as entries under the combined heading of proper nouns.

Standard modern practice

 * Caps traditionally distinguish a common form from a proper noun
 * God/god
 * Pegasus/pegasus
 * Sun/sun
 * Mercury/mercury
 * Heather/heather

Note that Earth and Moon are proper nouns. To make a reference to our planet, grammars I used in school advised capitalizing it, as it is a proper noun. There are of course common nouns earth and moon as well, but these lower case labels do not apply uniquely to our planet or its satellite. There are many cases of this in astronomy, such as the Bull (Taurus) versus the common noun bull.

That’s because the Moon is the name of our moon. Moon is its name (proper noun), moon is what it is (common noun)


 * Was a time when habit was to capitalize all (or most?) nouns (as in German)
 * Example (First Folio? Socialism?)
 * Still done occasionally to emphasize key words, but often with irony (CMS 7.50)
 * Still done in titles of works (name of the work)

Capitalized common nouns
Being capitalized does not make a noun proper Usually derive from a proper noun OR acronym OR initialism OR scientific genus name (properly names the group, not the members)


 * Albanian (V-ball talk page)
 * Frenchman
 * Turk


 * Buddhist
 * Muslim

"Proper adjectives" - capitalized (CMS 8.64), but often lowercase when non-literal (CMS 8.65)


 * CD
 * DVD
 * UFO
 * WC
 * NATO (is a proper noun)


 * Academic marks
 * Names of courses in a curriculum (Mathematics, Modern Philosophy)


 * Tyrannosaurus


 * Titles of persons used in conjunction with or in place of the name (Saint Boniface, the Pope, the Dalai Lama?, the President, the Queen, Grandpa)
 * Trademarks (Kleenex, Xerox, Pinto)


 * Titles of works (as mentioned above)
 * Act, scene, chapter, book?


 * For emphasis

Lowercase proper nouns

 * Names of card games
 * Styles of music
 * Optional for modern historical events and periods (baby boom, gold rush) CMS 8.81

OK, so what about poker? bridge? whist? I've had a conversation with someone about this before, but I can't remember who it was. Obviously, the word poker is not usually capitalized, however, it is the name of a card game. It is also clearly not descriptive. I can find examples of it capitalized. In fact, the copy I have of Hoyle's consistently capitalizes the word "Poker", even though I note that the citations given in the OED do not. Is poker a proper noun?

Recently, some proper nouns no longer begin with a capital letter or place the capital letter in a position other than initial.
 * ee cummings
 * iPod, eBay

Proper nouns used as common nouns
As noted in OED, s.v. "proper" I, 2, b:
 * The same proper name may be borne by many persons in different families or generations, or by several places in different countries or localities; but it does not connote any qualities common to and distinctive of the persons or things which it denotes. A proper name may however receive a connotation from the qualities of an individual so named, an may be used as a common noun, as a Hercules, a Cæsar (Kaiser, Czar), a Calvary, an atlas.

Assorted unincorporated notes

 * Here’s a quote from Moderna Gramática Portuguesa. It might be of interest for your research:
 * “Substantivo comum é o que se aplica a um ou mais objetos particulares que reúnem características inerentes a dada classe: homem, mesa, livro, cachorro, lua, sol, fevereiro, segunda-feira, papa.
 *  “Os cinco últimos exemplos patenteiam que há substantivos comuns que são nomes individualizados, não como os nomes próprios, mas pelo contexto extralinguístico e pelo nosso saber que nos diz que, no contexto “natural” nosso só há uma lua, um sol, um mês fevereiro, e um só dia da semana segunda-feira, e, no contexto “cultural”, só há um papa. Se forem escritos com maiúscula, deve-se o fato à pura convenção ortográfica, e não porque são nomes próprios.”
 * “Common noun is what applies to one or more specific objects that contain inherent characteristics of a given class: man, table, book, dog, moon, sun, February, Monday, pope.
 * “The last five examples show that there are common nouns which are names individualised by, unlike proper nouns, extralinguistic context and by what our knowledge tells us, in the “natural” context there is only one Moon, one Sun, one month of February and only one weekday Monday, and, in the “cultural” context, there is only one pope. If they are to be written with upper case, that is only due to orthographic convention, and not because they are proper nouns.”
 * — Ungoliant (Falai) 18:15, 5 January 2013 (UTC)