No. A wilderness (the wilderness) is an unspecified place, like a city, and you can go there. An example of an abstract noun would be "wildness" that is a perceived but intangible aspect of the wilderness.
Yes, the noun 'wilderness' is a concrete noun, a word for an uncultivated, uninhabited, or inhospitable place; a word for a physical place.
The noun 'wilderness' is sometimes used in an abstract context, for example, a bureaucratic wilderness or an intellectual wilderness.
Yes, wildlife is an abstract noun, it's a word for living things, mammals, birds, fishes, and plants as a whole, not the specific individuals.
Yes, i just know it it i don’t know why..
yes
Is cheer an abstract noun or a concrete noun??????
Yes, the noun astonishment is an abstract noun, a word for an emotional reaction.
Is undergone an abstract noun
The abstract noun is criticism.
Abstract noun of hopeless
Is cheer an abstract noun or a concrete noun??????
Yes, the noun astonishment is an abstract noun, a word for an emotional reaction.
Is undergone an abstract noun
Concrete noun
The abstract noun is criticism.
The noun 'hopefulness' is an abstract noun, a word for an emotion.
The abstract noun is obligation.
Friendship has not abstract noun because It is a abstract noun
Abstract noun of hopeless
The abstract noun form is tourism.
The abstract noun for the adjective quick is quickness.
The abstract noun for the adjective vacant is vacantness. Another abstract noun form is vacancy.