Yes. Although Pizza is a dish that can have more than one style or recipe, any individual pizza will be a physical item, represented by a concrete noun.
Yes
The noun 'pizza' is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a thing.
concrete
Concrete. (You can see it, feel it, bite it!)
No, the compound noun 'Pizza Hut' is a proper noun, the name of a business and a corporation.A proper noun is the name of a person, place, or thing. Pizza Hut is a thing.
The noun 'cafeteria' is a concrete noun as a word for a physical place.
The noun pizza is a countable noun; one pizza, two pizzas.
Door to success is an abstract noun. It depends
The noun 'Philadelphia' is a concrete noun, a word for a physical place.
Concrete. (But few bathtubs are made out of concrete.)
A concrete noun is a word for something that can be experienced by any of the five physical senses; something that can be seen, heard, smelled, tasted, or touched.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing.Example sentences with concrete and proper nouns in bold:The bridge to get to Brooklynis called the BrooklynBridge.We can pick up a pizza at Pizza Hut.Fran and Frank have a new baby.They gave me a beautiful book of photos of the Great Barrier Reef.Polly want a cracker?
The word "pizza" is a count noun. As a count noun: We ordered four pizzas. I ate an entire pizza. We shared a small pizza.
Is cheer an abstract noun or a concrete noun??????