As a group, it is a population; a single person is a citizen. The people of a place are also called inhabitants; or a single person is an inhabitant.
The noun forms for the verb to populate are population, and the gerund, populating.
The suffix for "populate" is "-tion", which forms the noun "population".
It is neither: people is a noun, a plural or collective version of "person." Used colloquially with other nouns (e.g. he is a people person), it is a noun adjunct. It could also be a verb meaning to populate (to provide with people).
i guess animals can over populate by people continuously breeding them and they can under populate by people hunting them over and over again for no reason
As sense of "the degree to which a place is populated" first recorded in English in 1612, from Late Latin populationem(circa 470, nomnitave form of populatio) "a people, multitude," as a noun of action from Latin populus"people."
Yes, populate is a verb meaning to fill with inhabitants.
No, the word 'people' is a noun, a plural noun.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.Example: The people stood at the counter to place orders. They then took a seat and their food was brought to them.The pronouns 'they', 'their', and 'them' take the place of the noun 'people' in the second sentence.
Yes it is ,it is a place so it is a noun remember a noun is people,places,and things
inhabit, occupy, people
The Minoans
The noun 'nation' is a common noun, a general word for a country that has its own land and government.The noun 'nation' is an abstract noun; a word for an aggregate group of people that are linked by ancestry, history, or culture.The noun 'nation' is a concrete noun as a word for a country.
A house is typically considered a place noun because it refers to a specific location where people live.