is troop a comman noun
it is not a noun; troop is a noun. Troop is a common noun.
The noun 'troop' is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a group of people or things. The noun 'troop' functions as a collective noun for: a troop of Brownies a troop of dogfish a troop of gorillas a troop of kangaroos a troop of monkeys a troop of soldiers
common noun
It is not a pronoun it is a common noun.
Galaxy is common noun
As a noun, troop has two meanings, one a singular noun and one the more typical group noun. As both refer to people, they are concrete nouns. troop - a group of scouts, or soldiers troop - a single soldier (trooper) -- very rarely used
Yes, the noun 'troop' is a collective noun, for example:a troop of Browniesa troop of dogfisha troop of gorillasa troop of kangaroosa troop of monkeysa troop of soldiers
The noun 'troop' is a standard collective noun for:a troop of Browniesa troop of dogfisha troop of gorillasa troop of kangaroosa troop of monkeysa troop of soldiers
The noun 'troop' is a collective noun for:a troop of apesa troop of artillerya troop of baboonsa troop of boy scoutsa troop of cavalrya troop of dogfisha troop of foxesa troop of giraffesa troop of horsesa troop of kangaroosa troop of lemursa troop of lionsa troop of monkeysa troop of mushroomsa troop of soldiers
“flange” or a “troop.”
The collective noun for "troop" is "troop." Collective nouns are specific to the group they are describing, and in this case, "troop" is both the singular and collective form. It is used to refer to a group of soldiers, scouts, or other organized individuals.
The word 'troop' is a noun or a verb, not a pronoun. Examples:noun: We'll need at least a dozen sandwiches to feed this troop.verb: Let's meet at ten then we can all troop down to personnel with our grievance.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence. The pronoun that takes the place of the noun 'troop' is it. Example:The troop will march for two hours, then it will need to rest.Because the noun troop is a group of people, the plural pronouns 'they' and 'them' are also used:The troop will march for two hours, then they will need to rest. At that time we can feed them.