No
The noun 'chicken pie' is a singular, common, compound, concrete noun; a word for a thing.
No, although there are several uses for the noun. The noun "yarn" (material for knitting) is considered a noun adjunct, not an adjective, when used with other nouns (e.g. yarn twisting).
Yarn comes in skeins and in balls.
Not except in the slang usage, to mean easily scared or cowardly (you're just chicken), where it can also be a noun. The compound adjective chicken-hearted extends the metaphor.The word chicken is normally a noun, for the domestic fowl and foodstuffs made from it.
The nouns in the sentence are:Mrs. Paulus -proper noun, subject of the sentence;mom -common noun, direct object of the verb 'told';chicken pox - common, compound noun, direct object of the verb 'have'.
Yes, the word 'yarn' is a noun; a word for a spun fiber; a word for a long, implausible story; a word for a thing.
The noun chicken (the creature) is a countable noun; one chicken or a dozen chickens. The noun chicken (the food, a substance) is a mass (non-count) noun; units are expressed in pieces of chicken, parts of chicken, pounds of chicken, etc.
noun;1. A fine synthetic yarn.
Fried Chicken skin is a compound
what is a compound noun?
No, "online" is a closed compound word, not a compound noun.
A compound noun form of the noun 'bride' is bridegroom.