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.
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.
Between 5 and 2005 years. This is common knowlege! :/
its a white tiger
Zebra isn't a word in the Latin language so it is plainly just zebra.