Yes the word garden is a common noun. The plural would be gardens.
No. In this case vegetable is an adjective describing the type of garden. Garden is just a regular noun.
Yes, garden centre is a noun.
Yes, the word 'garden' is used as a collective noun for a garden of florists.
The noun 'garden' is a countable noun, a noun with a singular and a plural form.Examples:My neighbor has a pretty garden. (singular)Let's walk through the park to see all the gardens. (plural)
No. In this case vegetable is an adjective describing the type of garden. Garden is just a regular noun.
Garden is the only common noun in the sentence. Angie is a proper noun; you is a pronoun.
No, the word gardener is a noun; a word for someone who keeps a garden; a word for a person.The word 'garden' is the adjective form, as well as a verb and a noun.
Yes, gardener is a common, singular noun; a person who tends a garden.
No - garden is singular, gardens is plural.
In the noun phrase 'a garden of roses', the noun 'garden' is functioning as a collective noun. Other standard collective nouns are 'a bed of roses' and 'a bouquet of roses'.
There is no standard collective noun for 'garden gnomes', in which case any noun that suits the situation can function as a collective noun; for example, a pair of garden gnomes; a troop of garden gnomes, a tribe of garden gnomes, etc.
The term 'green garden' is a noun phrase, a group of words based on a noun that functions as a unit in a sentence.The noun phrase 'green garden' is made up of the noun'garden' described by the adjective 'green'.Example functions of a noun phrase:A green garden was planted behind the house.subject of the sentenceThe restaurant had its own green garden for fresh vegetables.direct object of the verb 'had'We're making plans for a green garden next summer.object of the preposition 'for'