Yes, "chicken" is a noun. It refers to a type of bird commonly raised for its meat and eggs.
In French, the word 'chicken' is masculine and is translated as 'poulet.'
The noun form of the verb "noun" is "noun-ness" or "nominalization."
If a noun is connected to a preposition, the corresponding word for a verb would be the object. The preposition typically indicates the relationship between the noun and the object.
No, the word "chicken" does not have a long vowel. The "i" in chicken is a short vowel sound.
No the word notes is a plural noun. The singular noun is note.
The noun chicken (the creature) is a countable noun; one chicken or a dozen chickens. The noun chicken (the food, a substance) is a mass (non-count) noun; units are expressed in pieces of chicken, parts of chicken, pounds of chicken, etc.
It can be, in context. If referring to an individual bird, then it is a regular common noun. If it is talking about chicken meat, then this is an uncountable noun, there is no 'a chicken' when talking about chicken meat.
The noun 'chicken pie' is a singular, common, compound, concrete noun; a word for a thing.
The chicken just crossed the road.
The noun 'chicken' is a singular noun as a word for a type of bird. The plural noun is 'chickens'.The noun 'chicken' is an uncountable noun as a word for the meat of this type of bird, a word for a substance.The noun 'chicken' is a common gender noun, a word for a male or a female bird.The gender specific noun for a male chicken is 'rooster'.The gender specific noun for a female chicken is 'hen'.A noun functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the (direct or indirect) object of a verb or the object of a preposition.Example uses:Four chickens will be needed for the barbecue. (subject of the sentence, plural-countable)I found an egg in the nest that a chicken had laid. (subject of the relative clause, singular-countable)We made enough chicken for everyone. (direct object of the verb 'made', uncountable)They made the chickens a shelter. (indirect object of the verb 'made', plural-countable)We made the soup with leftover chicken. (object of the preposition 'with', uncountable)Note: The noun 'chicken' is also an informal word for a contest between people in which the first person to lose nerve and withdraw from a daring or dangerous situation or activity is the loser.The word 'chicken' is an informal adjective used to describe a person as timid or cowardly.
Noun Hen : Poule Female chicken : Femelle
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.The gender noun for a female chicken is hen.The gender noun for a male chicken is rooster.The common gender noun, a word for a male or a female, is chicken.
Not except in the slang usage, to mean easily scared or cowardly (you're just chicken), where it can also be a noun. The compound adjective chicken-hearted extends the metaphor.The word chicken is normally a noun, for the domestic fowl and foodstuffs made from it.
The preposition is the word "of." The phrase "of chicken" modifies the noun "type."
Season can be a noun or a verb.Noun: Winter is the coldest season of the year.Verb: You need to season the chicken before you bake it.
If you say 'I taste the difference' then 'taste' is the present tense. If you say 'I will taste the difference' then it's the future tense, although strictly speaking the word requires 'will' to go before it in this instance.
The pronoun is I., a word that takes the place of the noun for the person speaking.The pronoun 'I' is a personal pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun for a specific person or thing.The personal pronouns are: I, you, we, he, she, it, me, us, him, her, they, them.