The nouns in the sentence are excitement and air.
The girl jumped high into the air with excitement smeared across her face!
Collective nouns are words to group a like nouns. Collective nouns are not used for the actions of a noun, such a air. Perhaps you were thinking of a synonym (a word that means the same thing) for the term 'air being fast'; a synonym might be 'wind'.
A balloon or a tire can both be filled with air.
Actually neither, although coming "before" (pre-) it would have to be a prefix.Airport is a compound word formed from two nouns, air+port, and having a specific meaning. Compounds can also be formed with adjectives and nouns (hard+ware) or verbs and nouns, especially the gerund form (breast+feeding).(see the related link)
They
The girl jumped high into the air with excitement smeared across her face!
the sweet aroma of pine filled the country air.
It's called 'There's excitement in the air'.
Example sentences for the adjective 'thunderous':A thunderous explosion rocked the neighborhood.The musicians swelled with pride from the thunderous applause.This is a also a good sentence: "The clouds were making thunderous noises that filled the air."
It is filled with air. A soccer ball is filled with foam. Air
No, it is filled with heated air.
It is filled with heated air. Since air is mostly nitrogen, a hot air balloon is mostly filled with nitrogen.
I can give you several sentences.The dog leapt into the air to catch the frisbee.I watched as the salmon leapt from the river.He leapt over the fence in his excitement.
The air was filled with an aroma of sweet potato pie with a hint of rose water coming from the restroom.
a air filled is air filled and and international is sticky
all of it
It is simply air that has been heated. Hence the namehot air balloons are filled with hot air from a propane tank