Yes. Words that describe areas, or political subdivisions, are all nouns.
Territory is a noun.
Yes the word territories is a plural noun. The singular noun is territory.
The possessive form for the noun territory is territory's.Example: The territory's main industry is agriculture.
As a noun, country can indicate a specific nation or territory OR the more rural portions of that territory. You can be in the country of Australia, but if you stay in Melbourne the whole time, you're not exactly out in the country. As an adjective, it means having rural characteristics, such as a country road or country music.
find a territory
Territory is a noun.
Territory is not an adjective, it's a noun. The adjective form is territorial.
Yes the word territories is a plural noun. The singular noun is territory.
The possessive form for the noun territory is territory's.Example: The territory's main industry is agriculture.
The possessive form for the noun territory is territory's.Example: The territory's main industry is agriculture.
The noun 'Colorado' is a proper noun, the name of a specific state.The noun 'state' is a common noun, a general word for a politically organized body of people usually occupying a territory; a general word for the territory so occupied.The noun phrase 'The State of Colorado' is a proper noun, a title.
No, sooner is an adverb. But there is a proper noun Sooner, a nickname applied to pioneers in the Oklahoma Territory.
No, the noun 'Tenochtitlan' is a proper noun, the name of a specific place.A common noun is a general word for a place, for example, a city, a capital, or a territory.
The transpostion is the noun territory (region or land area).
The proper noun, an island and US territory, is Puerto Rico.
Yes, the word territories is a noun. It is the plural of "territory" (unincorporated region, or state-like provincial governmental unit).
The proper noun is Puerto Rico (Caribbean island and territory of the US).