Yes, the word 'reindeer' is a noun, a word for a type of mammal; a word for a thing.
There is no standard collective noun specifically for reindeer, however the collective nouns for 'deer' can be used; for example, a herd of reindeer, a parcel of reindeer, a mob of reindeer, etc.
Yes, reindeer is a countable noun; however, like the noun deer, the singular and the plural are spelled the same: one reindeer, eight reindeer. A uncountable noun (or mass noun) is noun for a substance or concept that is indivisible into countable units, words like water and knowledge.
Proper because it is only one word ad rein doesn't describe the deer reindeer is one
The plural possessive form of "reindeer" is "reindeers'"
The word reindeer is a common noun, a word for any reindeer anywhere.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, thing, or a title; for example:William Killefer, "Reindeer Bill", played, coached, managed Major League Baseball from 1909 to 1957.Reindeer Lake, on the border of Saskatchewan and Manitoba, CanadaReindeer Street, New Orleans, LA or Reindeer Street, Santa Claus, GAReindeer Ranch California Sweet White Wine (Rutherford Wine Company)"Rudolph The Red Nosed Reindeer" by Robert L. May, originally published 1939
The noun reindeer is both the singular and the plural; the singular and the plural possessive form is reindeer's.
The anagram is the proper noun Rudolph (the red-nosed reindeer).
The noun dasher (a person or thing that dashes) is a common noun. The noun Dasher (the name of one of Santa's reindeer) is a proper noun because it is the name of something specific. A name of a person, place, or thing is always a proper noun.
der Blitz-noun, blitzen-verb (Yes, like the reindeer. Donner is thunder.)
The singular possessive for reindeer is reindeer's.
Buddy can be a reindeer, but he is not.Buddy is not a reindeer.
The singular possessive for reindeer is reindeer's.