Yes, it is a noun, a fruit, salad vegetable, or a plant. All food names are nouns.
There is no standard collective noun for the noun 'tomato sauce'.Collective nouns are an informal part of language, any noun that suits the context can function as a collective noun; for example, a jar of tomato sauce, a can of tomato sauce, a pot of tomato sauce, etc.
The word tomato is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a thing.
The plural form of tomato is tomatoes.
Tomato is a noun and a name, as such it has no past or future tense.
Tomatoes
"Tomato" is a countable noun because you can count individual tomatoes, such as one tomato, two tomatoes, and so on. When referring to tomatoes in general or in a mass context, you might use "tomato" in an uncountable sense, but it typically remains countable in everyday usage.
That is the correct spelling of "tomato."
Yes, the noun 'tomato' is a common noun; a general word for a type of fruit (often prepared as a vegetable) that has many varieties; a word for any tomatoes of any kind.
"Zuppa di pomodoro" is an Italian equivalent of "tomato soup."Specifically, the feminine noun "zuppa" means "soup." The preposition "di" means "of, from." The masculine noun "pomodoro" means "tomato."The pronunciation is "TSOOP-pah dee POH-moh-DOH-roh."
In French, the word for tomato, tomate, is a feminine noun.
The plural form for the noun tomato is tomatoes. The plural possessive form of is "tomatoes'". "The tomatoes' skins were very tough."
Salsa di pomodoro is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "tomato sauce." The feminine singular noun, possessive preposition, and masculine singular noun translate lilterally into English as "sauce of tomato." The pronunciation will be "SAL-sa dee PO-mo-DO-ro" in Italian.