i think it s beehive
Bees: /bees/ Beehive: bee/hive
The Spanish word for 'hive' is colmena; la colmena. That is, it's the standalone structure that bees make out of wax. The accommodating box provided to the bees by beekeepers is called a caja de colmena, or 'box of hive.'
An active home for bees is a 'live hive'.
The noun 'hive' is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a structure for domesticated honeybees; a nest built by wild bees; a colony of bees living is one of these structures; a place swarming with activity; a word for a thing.
A nesting and breeding place for bees and wasps.
yes, and beehive is one word, you can say bee and you can say hive, but if you mean it as a bee's hive then it is one word
There is no abstract noun form for the noun 'bees', a word for a physical creature.An abstract noun is a word for something that can't be experienced by any of the five physical senses; something that can't be seen, heard, smelled, tasted, or touched.The standard collective nouns for a group of bees are:a bike of beesa charm of beesa cluster of beesan erst of beesa game of beesa grist of beesa hive of beesa hum of beesa nest of beesa rabble of beesa swarm of bees
There is not word in English spelled 'beeds'.The collective noun for beads is a string of beads.The collective nouns for bees are a bike of bees, a charm of bees, a drift of bees, a grist of bees, a hive of bees, a hum of bees, a stand of bees, a swarm of bees
Beekeeper.
No, the word 'honeybees' is simply the plural form of the noun honeybee. A collective noun is a word used to group nouns that share a commonality; for example: The collective nouns for bees are a hive of bees, a swarm of bees, a cluster of bees.
No, "hive" is not a long vowel word. The "i" in "hive" makes a short vowel sound.
The noun "hive" can be classified as a common noun because it refers to a general type or class of objects (in this case, a structure where bees live and store honey). It can also be a countable noun when referring to individual hives.