No, the word 'garbage' is a concrete noun, a word for food waste and discarded or useless materials, a word for a physical thing. The noun 'gargage' is sometimes used in an abstract context, for example: Your excuses are garbage.
Yes, it is a noun. Trash, rubble, and garbage are nouns. Trash can also be used as a verb (to dispose of, or slang to criticize harshly).
Garbage. You put Garbage in the Garbage.
The garbage of Garbage Island comes from mostly the United States
Reduce, Reuse, Recycle ! Garbage, Garbage, Garbage! Why would We through this out ?
The noun garbage is an uncountable noun; units are expressed as a lot of garbage, some garbage, a little garbage, a can of garbage, a barge of garbage, etc. The noun garbage is a concrete noun as a substance. The noun garbage is an abstract noun as a concept.
The collective noun is a heap of garbage or a pile of garbage.
No, the noun garbage is an uncountablenoun, a type of noun called an aggregate noun (a word representing an indefinite number of elements or parts). Units of garbage are expressed by quantity or description, for example:a lot of garbagesome garbagea can of garbagea pile of garbagea load of garbage
Yes, the word garbage is an uncountable noun, a type of aggregate noun (a word representing an indefinite number of elements or parts) Units of uncountable nouns are expressed in amounts, for example "a piece of garbage", "a pile of garbage", a lot of garbage", etc.
Yes, the two nouns, garbage and carton, form a compound noun; a singular, common, concrete noun, a word for a thing.
No, the word 'garbage' is a concrete noun, a word for food waste and discarded or useless materials, a word for a physical thing. The noun 'gargage' is sometimes used in an abstract context, for example: Your excuses are garbage.
The noun garbage is an uncountablenoun, a type of noun called an aggregate noun (a word representing an indefinite number of elements or parts). Units of garbage are expressed by quantity or description, for example:a lot of garbagesome garbagea can of garbagea pile of garbagea load of garbage
The nouns are garbage and puddles.
yes
No, it is not. Garbage is a noun meaning refuse or trash. It is however, used as a noun adjunct in terms such as garbage disposal and garbage truck.
There is no standardized collective noun for a group of rubbish. However, collective nouns are an informal part of language; any noun that suits the context can function as a collective noun; for example, a heap of rubbish, a bag of rubbish, a bin or rubbish, or barrel of rubbish.
No, the noun 'rubbish' is a concrete noun, a word for waste material, a physical thing.People sometimes use the word rubbish as an interjection, or in an abstract context, for example:Your excuses are a pile of rubbish.