Yes, the word 'village' is a noun, a word for a very small town; a word for a place.
Yes, the word 'villagers' is a noun, a word for people who live in a village. The noun 'villagers' is the plural form of the singular noun 'villager'.
The noun 'villagers' is a common gender noun, a word for male and/or female residents of a village.
The plural possessive is villagers'. When the plural form ends in 's' you simply add an apostrophe to make it possessive.
Yes, the noun village is a common noun, a word for any village anywhere.A proper noun is the name of a person, place, thing or a title.A proper noun is the name of a village, such as the Village of Lakewood, IL. Some examples:The Village Doctor (medical practice), Woodside, CAVillage Street, Concord, NH or Village Road, Breckenridge, COVillage Candle, Wells, ME or Village Books, Norfolk, UK"The Village by the Sea" a novel by Anita Desai
The villagers were ravaged by the Viking invaders.
Villagers are people who live in villages.
The noun 'villagers' is a common gender noun, a word for male and/or female residents of a village.
The plural possessive is villagers'. When the plural form ends in 's' you simply add an apostrophe to make it possessive.
The plural form of the noun villager is villagers.The plural possessive form is villagers'.example: The tax collector surveyed all of the villagers' fields.
The form villager's is the possessive form of the singular noun villager.The plural form of the noun villager is villagers.The plural possessive form is villagers'.Example: The villagers' decision was to fund a traffic light for Main Street.
The plural possessive form of villager's is villagers', for example, "The villagers' water supply had been tainted by runoff from the farms."
No, villagers do not eat.
Virtual Villagers 1: A New Home Virtual Villagers 2: The Lost Children Virtual Villagers 3: The Secret City Virtual Villagers 4: The Tree of Life Virtual Villagers 5: New Believers
"Village" as an adjective or "(female) villagers" or "fellow countrywomen" as nouns are just three English equivalents of the Italian word paisane.Specifically, the Italian word is a feminine adjective or noun, in their plural forms. The adjective may be translated as "(relating to) villages" as an adjective modifying a feminine plural noun. The noun refers to an all-female group of "compatriots, countrywomen, villagers" in English.But whatever the meaning or use, the pronunciation always will be "peye*-ZAH-ney" in Italian.*The sound is similar to that in the noun "eye" in English.
Y are the villagers reuctant
Virtual Villagers 4 will be called Virtual Villagers 4: The Tree of Life.
Villagers are never hostile towards you, unless they are zombies or you have a mod that causes villagers to attack you
the villagers was so happy