civic
The plural noun of "duty" is "duties."
The word describing is the present participle of the verb to describe. The noun form for the verb is describer, one who describes, describability, and the gerund (verbal noun) describing. Another noun form is description.
Yes the word duties is an irregular plural noun. The singular noun is duty.
The word "citizens" is a plural noun.
The word citizens is already a noun. It is the plural of citizen.
It is the plural noun: sagas
the noun is 'box'. the adjective describing that noun is 'cardboard'
Cheap in Spanish is barato if you are describing a masculine noun and barata if you are describing a feminine noun.
The noun forms for the verb to describe are describer, description, and the gerund, describing.
No, the noun 'citizens' is the plural form of the singular noun 'citizen', a word for a person.A collective noun is a noun used to group people (citizens) or things in a descriptive way.There is no standard collective noun for a group of citizens, however, collective nouns are an informal part of language. Any noun that suits the context can function as a collective noun; for example, a group of citizens, a contingent of citizens, a mob of citizens, etc.
Something describing a noun.
No it is not because it is not describing a noun. Its describing times when things happen