Yes, the word 'livestock' is a noun, a word for farm animals bought or sold, or used for food; a word for a thing.
Livestock is a noun.
Yes it is. It has the words "live" and "stock" or the words "lives" and "tock".
No. A ranch, either the property or the buildings or the livestock, or all of these, is a concrete noun.
It can be. A ranch is a location where livestock are raised. The related verb is "to ranch."
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.
The noun 'market' is not a specific collective noun for anything, but it is a suitable noun for use as a collective noun. Some possible uses might be a market of goods, a market of food, a market of livestock, etc.
The noun corral is a pen or fenced enclosure for horses or livestock. The verb corral means to gather livestock (cattle, horses) and metaphorically means to force a meeting or gathering.
The noun 'livestock' is normally considered to be plural, meaning 'domesticated farm animals', for example cattle or sheep. 'Mr Johnson's livestock were kept in the field at the far end of his farm.' However, the word would be singular if you were considering livestock as a single entity rather than a number of individual animals. 'Although Mr Johnson describes himself as an arable farmer, his livestock contributes part of his income.'
The word 'feed' is a noun as a word for food for livestock; a device for supplying material to a machine; the transmission of published content over a network of television or internet; a word for a thing.The noun forms of the verb to feed are feeder and the gerund, feeding.
The word corral has multiple meanings.As a noun meaning a livestock pen:She galloped her horse around the corral.As a verb meaning to put livestock into a pen:He corralled the cattle back behind the fence.
Livestock managaement is when you take care of livestock, which are animals.
Livestock managaement is when you take care of livestock, which are animals.