Yes the word moth is a noun. It is a common noun.
Yes the word moth is a noun. It is a common noun.
A moth is a noun. It is a nocturnal insect.
Yes, "Emperor" is a proper noun when used as part of a specific title, such as "Emperor Napoleon" or "Emperor Hirohito."
The Latin feminine noun blatta means a cockroach or a moth.
Moth is a common noun. Proper nouns are names for specific people, places, events, and things, such as Senator Ted Kennedy, Buckingham Palace, Saturday, and the Battle of Saratoga, and are capitalized. Common nouns are nouns that refer to types of people, places, and things, such as surgeon, palomino, pumice, fairgrounds, century, and civilization, and are not capitalized except at the beginning of a sentence. Moth is a common noun because it refers to a type of person, place, or thing.
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If this is a joke the answer is if the moth fairy is a moth the moth would follow the light queen.
No, the largest is the Atlas moth
moth
"Leopard moth" can refer to several different species, depending on where you are. There is a type of carpenter worm moth called the leopard moth in Europe, and a type of tiger moth called the leopard moth in the US.
A 'moth' is a 'polilla'.
mother moth