Yes, zebra is a noun. Side note: that is a common noun, a certain species of zebra is a proper noun
They're animals.
The common ancestor is the Hyracotherium
There are three different species of zebras: Equus zebra, Equus quagga, and Equus grevyi. The "common zebra" is Equus quagga.
There are three species of zebra: the plains zebra, the Grévy's zebra, and the mountain zebra. Plains zebras are the most common and widespread of the three, while Grévy's zebras have more narrow stripes and are found in Kenya and Ethiopia. The mountain zebra has a dewlap under its neck and is found in southern Africa.
both stripy lol
Zee Zee, Eddy, or Neddy. (Names that end with a high pitched E sound.
Africa is the most common for Zebra's
No, the word 'zebra' is a common noun, a word for any zebra anywhere.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, thing, or a title; for example:Zebra Place, Staten Island, NY or Zebra Road, Gretna, VAZebra Lounge, Flushing, NYZebra Brand Basmati Rice"Zebra" by Clark Howard and "The Zebra Murders" by Prentice Earl Sanders and Bennett Cohen; true crime novels about a 1970s killing spree in San Francisco
The answer is zebra. If you cross a zebra with a zebra, you get a zebra. So the square root of zebra is zebra.
its a white tiger
Between 5 and 2005 years. This is common knowlege! :/