Yes, the word 'wolves' is a noun, the plural form for the noun 'wolf'; a word for a type of animal; a word for a living thing.
Wolves is already a plural noun. The singular form of wolves is wolf. A group of wolves is commonly called a pack.
The word wolves is the plural form of the noun wolf. The noun wolves is a common, concrete noun, a word for a predatory canine mammal, a word for a living thing.
Wolves IS a plural noun; it refers to 2 or more animals. Maybe you want a collective noun, which is different from a plural noun. Wolves live in packs, and pack would be a collective noun for wolves. A pack is a group of wolves, but pack itself is used as a singular noun. A pack is a single pack, even though it is made up of several wolves.
No, wolves is a plural noun.
A pack of wolves
No, it is not a noun so it is not a collective noun. The noun form is cheerleader, but that is not a collective noun.
The collective nouns are a pack of wolves or a rout (route) of wolves.
No, the noun 'wolf' is a singular noun; a word for one of this type of mammal.A collective noun is a noun used to group people or things in a descriptive way.The collective nouns for a group of wolves are 'a pack of wolves' and 'a route (rout) of wolves'.
A pack of wolves is singular, one pack of wolves: We can hear a pack of wolves howling at night. The plural form is packs of wolves: Several packs of wolves are vying for the same territory.
The possessive form of the plural noun wolves is wolves'.Example: The wolves' howls could be heard in the distance.
Wolves is a noun. It's the plural form of wolf.
The possessive form for the plural noun wolves is wolves'.Example:The wolves' habitat is shrinking steadily.