The word 'house' is both a noun and a verb.The noun 'house' (pronounced hous) is a common noun, a general word for any building suitable for humans or animals to live in; a word for a thing.The verb 'house' (pronounced houz) is a word meaning to provide shelter, space, or living quarters for humans or animals; a word for an action.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.The pronoun that takes the place of the noun 'house' is it.Example: We looked at a house on Elm Street. It seemed perfect.Note: The are some dictionaries that designate the word 'house' as an adjective, a word used to describe a noun. For example, you may consider the compound noun 'house cat' as the noun 'cat' described by the adjective 'house', or the noun 'cat' described by the attributive noun (a noun functioning as an adjective) 'house'.
Cat is a noun
There is one human and multiple animals in a farm. Here humans is singular and plural noun.
No. It is not. I am not sure what it is, but not a noun. A noun would be "dog, cat, house, person, man, woman" etc.. A proper noun would be a name of a person or place.
No, the word 'my' is a pronoun, a possessive adjective that is placed before a noun to describe that noun as belonging to the speaker. The word 'house' is a common noun, a word for any house of any kind. The term 'my house' can be considered a compound noun, a common noun just the same.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, thing, or a title; for example:John W. House MD, House Clinic Inc., Los Angeles, CAHouse Street, Indianapolis, IN or House Street, Pasadena, TXThe White House, 1600 Pensylvania Avenue, Washington, DCMyHouse, magazineMy House (non-profit organization), Atlanta, GA"My House" (poetry) by Nikki GiovanniSome people name their houses, the names of those houses are proper nouns; for example, Elvis's Graceland or George W. Bush's Prairie Chapel Ranch in Texas.
Cat is a common noun
Yes, cat is a common noun.
Cat is a noun.
Feles, Felis (noun 3rd dec. F.)---cattus catti (noun 2nd dec. M.)[aka-catus, cati] you could also just use "cat" wild or mouser = Feles, Felis (noun 3rd dec. F.) house-cat(pet) = cattus, catti (noun 2nd dec. M.)[aka-catus, cati]
a cat house just like you say dog house
The noun 'cat' is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for an animal, a word for a thing.
cat's