The word spectators is a noun, a plural, common noun for the singular noun spectator. The verb form is spectate (spectates, spectating, spectated).
The word spectators is a noun, a plural, common noun for the singular noun spectator. The verb form is spectate (spectates, spectating, spectated).
The word spectators is a noun, a plural, common noun for the singular noun spectator. The verb form is spectate (spectates, spectating, spectated).
The word 'spectators' is a noun, the plural form of the singular noun 'spectator'; a word for a person.
No. It's just the plural form of a singular noun. If you said 'a group of spectators' the word group would be a collective noun.
The collective nouns are:a crowd of spectatorsan audience of spectators.
Spectators is a noun. It's the plural form of spectator.
An assembly of listeners or an assembly of spectators is use of the collective noun, assembly.
The collective noun is an audience of spectators.
In the phrase, "a group of spectators", the noun "group" is functioning as a collective noun. The standard collective noun is "an audience of spectators"; however, collective nouns are an informal part of language. Any noun that suits the situation can function as a collective noun.
A crowd is the collective noun for people watching a match. You cannot have a collective noun of watching a match because watching is a verb, not a noun.
The noun 'is' is a verb, a form of the verb 'to be'. The verb 'is' functions as an auxiliary verb and a linking verb.
No, it is a verb or a noun (to go around, to surround; a round shape). The adjective form is circular.