Yes, the word 'rooms' is a noun, the plural form of the singular noun room; a word for a space that can be occupied; a division in a house or building enclosed by walls; a word for a thing.
The word 'rooms' is also a verb, the third person, singular, present of the verb to room; meaning to share a room, apartment, or house with one or more people; to lodge.
Examples:
There is room for one more person in the car. (noun)
I room with a young man from the college. (verb)
The collective noun is a suite of rooms.
In the prepositional phrase "rooms of goods", the noun "rooms" is functioning as a collective noun.
The standard collective noun is a suite of rooms.Collective nouns are an informal part of language, any noun that suits the situation can function as a collective noun; for example, a set of rooms, a row of rooms, a block of rooms, etc.
The collective noun suit is used for a suit of clothes, a suit of cards, a suit of armor, and a suit of sails.The collective noun suite is used for a suite of rooms or a suite of furniture.
The noun 'rooms' is a plural, common, concrete noun. The word 'rooms' is also the third person, plural, present of the verb to room (to rent or share part of a living space).
The collective noun is a suite of rooms.The plural form for two or more is suites of rooms.
Men's room -- if there is only one room Men's rooms -- if there are many rooms.
The collective noun is a suite of rooms.
The plural form for the noun room is rooms.The plural possessive form is rooms'.example: I've made a list of all the rooms' dimensions.
There is no specific collective noun for bedrooms as a group, however the collective noun for rooms will work: a suite of bedrooms.
The plural noun is spelled vacancies (available rooms).
The word corridor is a noun. It is a narrow passage with rooms leading off from it.