Yes, the word 'goldfish' is a common noun; a word for any goldfish of any kind, anywhere.
A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, thing, or a title; for example:
The plural of goldfish is goldfish. It is the same as the singular.
Goldfish is a noun.
The word goldfish is a noun, a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a thing.
The collective noun is a troubling of goldfish.
Yes, the word 'goldfish' is a common noun; a word for any goldfish of any kind, anywhere.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, thing, or a title; for example:Goldfish Street, Corpus Christi, TX or Goldfish Way, San Diego, CAPepperidge Farm Goldfish Crackers (a registered trademark)"Memoirs of a Goldfish" by Devin Scillian and Tim Bowers"Goldfish have no Hiding Place" by James Hadley Chase
The noun 'glint' is used as a collective noun for a glint of goldfish.
The collective noun is a troubling of goldfish.
Goldfishes There is no plural for goldfish. Goldfish itself is plural. Example: Hey Bob, can I see that goldfish you caught? Example2: Hey Bob, can I see those goldfish you caught?
The noun 'Goalfish' is a word for a thing, a word for a website for students. The noun 'goldfish' is a word for a thing (a living thing), a word for a creature.
Some common breeds of goldfish are: the Black Moor goldfish, the Ryunkin goldfish, the comet goldfish, the common goldfish, the Calico Fantail goldfish, the telescope eye goldfish, the bubble eye goldfish, the pearl scale goldfish and the Oranda goldfish.
The collective noun is a troubling of goldfish.
No you cannot put a frog with goldfish; goldfish belong with goldfish