No, the word wild is used as an adjective (describing a noun).
The noun form is wilds or wildness; the adverb form is wildly.
The noun 'wild' is a singular, common, abstract noun, a word for a concept. The noun 'wild' is expressed as 'the wild'.
wild is an adjective...
wilderness
No most adverbs end in ly. Wildly is an adverb.No. It can be an adjective, as in "It was a wild day." It can also be a noun, as in "He lived in the wild".
No, a noun. A dingo is a wild dog in Australia
The noun 'wild' is a singular, common, abstract noun, a word for a concept. The noun 'wild' is expressed as 'the wild'.
wild is an adjective...
The term 'wild animal' (plural 'wild animals') is a noun, a common, compound noun; a word for creatures, things. The compound noun 'wild animals' is made up of the adjective 'wild' and the noun 'animals' to form a word with its own meaning.
There is no antonym for the noun 'wild flower'
To describe wild animals in adjective form, use adjectives that fit the animals you wish to describe. Words such as "tawny" or "speckled" will help to describe their appearance, while words such as "agile" or "ferocious" tell more about their abilities or behavior.
wilderness
The noun 'sounder' is a standard collective noun for 'a sounder of wild boars'.
Yes, the noun 'herd' is a standard collective noun for:antelopebisonbuffalocariboucattlecurlewsdeerdonkeyselephantselkgeesegoatshorses (wild)impalaskangaroosmooseporpoisesrabbitsreindeersealsspringbokswanswalruseswhaleswrenszebras
No most adverbs end in ly. Wildly is an adverb.No. It can be an adjective, as in "It was a wild day." It can also be a noun, as in "He lived in the wild".
A wild Australian dog is called a dingo, the plural of which is dingoes.
No, a noun. A dingo is a wild dog in Australia
Adjective. The cat is wild. Wild describes the cat. (the way first grade teachers say it :) )