No. In this case vegetable is an adjective describing the type of garden. Garden is just a regular noun.
yes garden is a common noun
The word 'garden' can either be a noun or a verb, depending on how it is used in a sentence.
Example of garden as a noun:
"You have so many beautiful flowers in your garden!"
Example of garden as a verb:
"I garden every day after work. I don't mind getting dirty because it helps me relieve stress!"
Common noun because if the garden had a name then it would be a proper noun.
No - garden is singular, gardens is plural.
Yes, the noun 'garden' is a neuter noun; a garden is a thing that has no gender.
Yes the word garden is a singular noun.
The plural noun would be gardens.
common noun
yes
The noun 'garden' is a countable noun, a noun with a singular and a plural form.Examples:My neighbor has a pretty garden. (singular)Let's walk through the park to see all the gardens. (plural)
The singular noun is pond; the plural noun is ponds.
The noun 'zucchini' is a count noun, a noun that has a singular and a plural form. The plural noun is zucchinis.Example: My neighbor gave me two zucchinis from his garden.
The noun 'mice' is the plural form of the singular noun 'mouse'.
The noun juggler is a singular noun. The plural noun is jugglers.
No - garden is singular, gardens is plural.
The noun 'garden' is a countable noun, a noun with a singular and a plural form.Examples:My neighbor has a pretty garden. (singular)Let's walk through the park to see all the gardens. (plural)
Yes, gardener is a common, singular noun; a person who tends a garden.
The singular noun is pond; the plural noun is ponds.
The possessive form of the singular noun neighbor is neighbor's.Example: My neighbor's garden is really beautiful.
Yes, a singular noun is replaced with a singular pronoun.Examples:Jack, you are a good friend.The teacher liked my essay. She gave me an A.My neighbor has a vegetable garden and he sometimes gives me tomatoes.
Yes the word garden is a common noun. The plural would be gardens.
The singular noun is garden.The plural noun is gardens.The noun forms of the verb to garden are gardener and the gerund, gardening.
The possessive form of the singular noun fern is fern's.Examples: I don't know the fern's type but it's thriving in my garden.
The noun Betty Garden is singular, not plural or possessive. The plural form is Betty Gardens; the possessive form is Betty Garden's. Betty Garden is a proper noun because it is the name of a person or a place; proper nouns are always capitalized.
Yes, the word arboretum is a noun, a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for abotanical garden devoted to trees, a word for a thing.
"Jardim" is a Portuguese equivalent of "garden."The Portuguese word is a masculine noun. Its singular definite article is "o" ("the"). Its singular indefinite article is "um" ("a, one").The pronunciation is "zhahr-djeeng."