No. Mooses are only found in northern climates such as Alaska and Canada.
Updates: 1/15/14... First, it's "moose" no matter how many. Secondly, here's a link to an article saying there have been... http://www.knoxpatch.com/moose-numbers-on-rise-in-east-tennessee/
No. Not usually. However, I have seen 2 in Kansas. Once in the 1990's in rural SW Kansas, and once in Rooks County near the Saline River.
Moose Skowron died on April 27, 2012, in Arlington Heights, Illinois, USA of congestive heart failure.
No, the word moose is a common noun, a word for any moose of any kind, anywhere. A common noun is capitalized only when it is the first word in a sentence.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, thing, or a title; for example:Stephen Moose, Associate Professor, Dept. of Crop Sciences at the University of Illinois, Urbana, ILMoose Island, Eastport, ME or Moose Island,Channahon, ILMoose Pharmacy, Mount Pleasant, NC"Thidwick the Big-Hearted Moose" by Dr. Seuss
59-60 hours Chicago to Anchorage weather and traffic and moose permitting.
Moose Moose Moose Chicken Moose was created on 2005-11-11.
Paul Christie does the voice of Moose A. Moose
The Plural for moose is moose.Examples:Look at that moose! (singular)Look at all those moose! (plural)
Its just moose . The plural for moose is moose .
The plural possessive of "moose" is "moose's" instead of "mooses'" because "moose" forms its plural by changing its internal structure (irregular plural). "Moose" does not add an "s" when pluralized, so the possessive form simply adds an apostrophe followed by an "s" to indicate ownership by multiple moose.
An albino moose is a pure white moose
Moose is a moose and zee is a bird.
Moose live with other moose in the wild.
Moose.(Look at those two moose over there, Johnny!)