The noun tunes is the plural form for tune, a word for a musical piece usually upbeat or cheerful. The noun disco is a word for a party or a club featuring Pop Music, but this use the word disco is the adjective, describing the noun tunes as a specific type of tunes.
When the two words are combined, they form the informal compound noun: disco tunes.
The plural form of the noun 'disco' as a word for a type of club is discos.The noun 'disco' as a word for a type of music is an uncountable noun.
discosby evie
There is no specific collective noun for tunes, in which case a noun suitable for the situation is used, for example a series of tunes, a variety of tunes, a repertoire of tunes, etc.
The word tune is a noun (tune, tunes) and a verb (tune, tunes, tuning, tuned)."Tune" is a noun as a word for a melody or a song (as in "sing a tune"). It is a verb as a word for adjusting the strings on a musical instrument (as in "tune" a piano.)
Disco is the same in Italian and in English.Specifically, the Italian word is a masculine noun when it means "disc, record." But it is a feminine noun when it is a shortened form of the feminine noun discoteca, which means "discotheque." The respective pronunciation is "DEE-skoh" and "DEE-skoh-TEH-kah."
The plural form for the noun tune is tunes.
The shorter version is disco.
R&B, Remixes, Dupstep and basic disco tunes but mixed up
Disco is a shortened word for the word discotheque. Discotheque is a popular form of music associated with the 1970's.
"Flying saucer" is an English equivalent of "disco voador."The Portuguese word "disco" is a masculine noun. Its singular definite article is "o" ("the"), and its singular indefinite article "um" ("a, one"). The masculine "voador" means "flier."Together, the pronunciation is "DJEE-skoo vwuh-DOHR."
The plural form of the noun 'tune' is tunes.When used as a verb, the word 'tunes' is present tense, not a plural. Verbs do not have a plural form.
discoes.