Yes, the word hay is a noun, common, concrete, uncountable noun; a word for a type of grass grown to feed livestock; a word for a thing.
Yes. Hay is a singular noun. A Singular noun means one item only. So technically, hay is a singular noun.
Hay is a noun.
The collective nouns for hay are:a bale of haya bundle of haya stack of haya truss of hay
The noun bales is the collective noun for bales of cotton or bales of hay.
The collective noun for chairs is a set of chairs. The noun bale is a collective noun for a bale of cotton or a bale of hay.
Since hay is describing the way velvet feels and velvet is a noun, it must be an adjective since it is describing a noun.
"School's being held" is an English equivalent of "Hay escuela," and "Is school being held?" is an English equivalent of "¿Hay escuela?"Specifically, the verb "hay" means "There is, There are." The feminine noun "escuela" means "school." The pronunciation is "eye* eh-SKWEH-lah."*The sound "eye" is similar to that in the English noun "eye."
Yes the name Barry is a noun. It is a proper noun.
The plural form of lock is locks.
Bay, day, gay, hay, hey, neigh, pay, ray, tray, way.
No, it is not. Jesus (Jesus of Nazareth) is a proper noun, as is the Spanish given name (pronounced hay-SOOS).
There are things for comfort or entertainment is an English equivalent of 'Hay cosas para comodidad o entretenimiento'. The verb 'hay' means 'there is, there are'. The feminine noun 'cosas' means 'things'. The preposition 'para'means 'for'. The feminine noun 'comodidad' means 'comfort, convenience'. The conjunction 'o' means 'or'. The masculine noun 'entretenimiento' means 'entertainment'. All together, they're pronounced 'eye* KOH-sah-SPAH-rah koh-moh-thee-thah oh ehn-treh-teh-nee-MYEHN-toh'.*The sound 'eye' is similar to the sound in the English noun 'eye'.