No it's a phrase. Nouns are a person, place, thing, or idea. A phrase has more than one word each of which is its own part of speech.
Your phrase is "Two children look in"
Two is an adjective. Children is a noun. Look is a verb. In is a preposition.
No, "Two children look" is a subject-verb phrase. The phrase does not contain a noun as the main word.
These are two words.Great is adjectiveChildren is noun
The possessive form for the plural noun children is children's.
No, the noun 'child' is singular, a word for one person.The noun 'children' is the plural noun, a word for two or more people.A collective noun is a noun used to group people or things in a descriptive or a fanciful way.The collective nouns for a group of children are:an ingratitude of childrena chaos of children
There are two nouns. Children and pets are both plural nouns.
The noun children is a plural, common noun, concrete noun.
Yes, "children" is a noun. It is a plural form of "child" and refers to young human beings.
The noun 'dolphin' is singular, a word for one of a type of marine mammal. The plural noun is dolphins.The noun 'children' is plural, a word for two or more young humans. The singular noun is child.
"Children" is a common noun for the Boxcar Children.
"Children" is a plural noun. The singular form is "child."
Yes, children is a common, plural noun.
The word "children" is a plural common noun. It refers to multiple young human beings.
No, the noun 'children' is the irregular plural form for the singular noun 'child'. A compound noun is a word made up of two or more words to form a noun with a meaning of its own. Examples: fire + man = fireman: battle + ship = battleship: mother + in + law = mother-in-law.