Yes the word things is a plural noun.
The singular noun is thing.
Yes, the noun 'things' is a noun, the plural form of the noun 'thing'.A noun is a word for a person, a place, and a thing (or things).
Yes! Nouns are people, places, and things. Foods are things.
Yes, things is a common noun, the plural form for the singular thing.
Yes, it is a plural noun. Objects and things are nouns, and so are the words objects and things.
The noun 'eyes' is a plural, common, concrete noun, a word for things.
Yes, vegetables is a noun, a plural, common, concrete noun; vegetables are things.
Some common plural nouns are: apples baboons cars deer eggs ferns gardens highways icebergs journals knees lantern martinis notes oceans people queens radishes soldiers trophies ushers vultures weekends xylophones yaks zoologists
The noun 'furniture' is an uncountable noun, an aggregate noun (a word representing an indefinite number of things; aggregate nouns have no singular form).
The word things is a noun. It is the plural form of thing.
The plural for of the noun carrot is carrots, a common, concretenoun; a word for two or more things.
A plural noun represents more than one of something. For example, 'flowers' is plural for 'flower'. Common, proper, abstract and collective nouns can all have plural forms. A collective noun is a singular (not plural) noun that represents a 'group' of things. For example, 'herd' is a collective noun for animals such as sheep and cows. Collective nouns can have plural forms; for example, 'herds' is the plural form of 'herd'.
No, the noun 'thousands' is a plural noun, the plural form of the singular noun 'thousand'.A collective noun is a noun used to group people or things in a descriptive way; for example, a herd of horses or a bouquet of flowers.