Yes, the word 'puppy' is a noun, a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a young dog; a word for a thing.
yes they are nouns because its a thing a noun is a person place or thing
A noun is a 'person, place, thing, or idea.' As puppy is a 'thing,' it can be used as a noun.
The possessive form for the noun puppy is puppy's.Example: The puppy's name is Felix.
The possessive form for the noun puppy is puppy's.Example: The puppy's name is Felix.
puppy
No, the noun 'puppy' is a common noun; a general word for a young dog; a word for any puppy of any kind.A proper noun is the name or title of a specific person, place or thing. A proper noun is the name of the puppy and Puppy Bowl (Animal Planet TV series) or Puppy Chow(Purina brand dog food).
The possessive form of the singular noun puppy is puppy's.The plural form of the noun puppy is puppies.The plural possessive form is puppies'.Examples:My puppy's name is Max.My puppies' names are Mickey and Minnie.
The nouns in the sentence are puppy and bone.
Puppy is a noun.
The possessive form is Palton's puppy.
Puppies.* When making plurals of words that end in y, the y changes to i then add es.lady - ladies, baby - babies, gravy - gravies,
Yes to both.
No, puppy is a noun. A noun is a person, place, or thing. An adverb describes a verb and usually ends in 'ly'. For example: quickly walked...'quickly' is the adverb.