Yes, the word tooth is a noun, a singular, common, concrete noun.
Tooth is a word for one of the hard white objects inside your mouth that you use for biting and for chewing food; one of a row of narrow pointed parts that form the edge of a tool or machine; a word for a thing.
The word tooth is the singular noun. The plural noun is teeth.
The plural form for the noun tooth is teeth.
No, it is not. The word tooth is a noun, which can be used as a noun adjunct, as in tooth decay or tooth fairy. The verb (to tooth) means to add teeth to a tool or gear.
The noun teeth is plural.The plural form is tooth.
The singular noun is tooth.The singular possessive noun is tooth's.
The noun 'teeth' is the plural noun. The singular noun is 'tooth'.
tooth. Teeth is plural, tooth is singular.
The singular noun is tooth.The singular possessive noun is tooth's.Example: The dentist smoothed the tooth's chipped edge.
The noun child's and the noun tooth are not plural nouns.The noun child's is the possessive form of the singular noun child (for example, a child's toy = a toy belonging to a child)The noun tooth is a singular noun. The plural noun is teeth.
The singular possessive is tooth's.
The singular noun is tooth.The singular possessive noun is tooth's.Example: The dentist smoothed the tooth's chipped edge.
The plural noun 'teeth' is an abstract noun as a word for the power and authority to be effective; a word for a concept.The plural noun 'teeth' (singular 'tooth') is a concrete noun as a word the hard, bony enamel-coated structures in the jaws of most vertebrates; the projections on the rim of a cogwheel or the edge of a saw or a comb; a word for physical things.