No, it is a plural noun. The common noun would be apple.
No, it is a plural noun. The common noun would be apple.
The word apple is a common noun.
"You like apples" You is the pronoun. Apples is a noun. Like is a verb. Can you guess what the subject is? Hint is it not apples.
Some common plural nouns are: apples baboons cars deer eggs ferns gardens highways icebergs journals knees lantern martinis notes oceans people queens radishes soldiers trophies ushers vultures weekends xylophones yaks zoologists
No, the plural noun 'apples' is a common noun; a word for any apples of any kind, anywhere.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, thing, or a title; for example:John Chapman aka Johnny Appleseed (1774-1845), American pioneerApples Church Road, Thurmont, MD or Apples Mill Road, West Newton, PAApples Bakery Northside Market, Peoria, IL"Sour Apples", murder mystery by Sheila Connolly
Collective nouns for apples are a bushel of apples, a pie-full of apples.
No, the noun apples is a plural noun, a word for two or more apples.The possessive noun is apple's.The plural possessive noun is apples'.Examples:The apple's color was a bright red. (singular)The cost of the pies is based on the apples' prices. (plural)
Yes, apple is a noun, a thing; apple is a singular, common, concrete noun. The word apple is also an adjective, a word that describes a noun, for example apple pie or apple juice.
The collective nouns for apples are:a basket of applesa bushel of applesa pie-full of applesa crop of apples
No, the noun volleyball is not a collective noun. The noun volleyball is a singular, common, concrete, compound noun, a word for a thing.A collective noun is a word used to group people or things taken together as one whole, for example a flock of birds, a bushel of apples, a team of players, etc.
Common noun
The word apple is a singular noun. The plural would be apples.