Yes, the word 'police officer' is a noun, a compound noun; a word for a person.
The possessive form of the noun police officer is police officer's.Example: The police officer's car blocked the escape of the suspect.
Police is a common noun. Proper nouns name a specific police officer or a specific police department. Examples: Officer Glen Martin The Glendale Police Department
it is a common noun
No. Police officer is not a proper noun
A police officer once told me, it's "hicket". A thicket is sometimes also known as a copse.
No. Police can be a verb (to keep order, to watch) or a collective noun for law enforcement personnel.The noun can be used as a noun adjunct with other nouns, e.g. police officer, police car.
A police officer once told me, it's "hicket". A thicket is sometimes also known as a copse.
Yes, like people it is a group noun that always uses the plural. To express the singular, you would have to use another noun, such as policeman, policewoman, or police officer.
The word police is a common noun, a word for any police of any kind, anywhere.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, thing, or a title, such as the New York City Police Department, The Royal Canadian Mounted Police, or the movie 'Police Academy'.
"The police officer" is a common noun because it refers to a general category of individuals who serve in law enforcement, rather than a specific name of a person. Common nouns describe general items or concepts, while proper nouns name specific entities. In contrast, if you were to use a specific name, like "Officer Smith," that would be a proper noun.
a few police, not many police, a few police officers, etc The noun police is unusual. Police is usually treated as plural, and has no singular form, except maybe a 'police officer', or a policeman.
The noun 'police' is a common gender noun as a word for members of a law enforcement body; a word for a group of mixed gender.The noun 'police' is a neuter noun as a word for a government department that keeps order and enforces law; a word for a thing.