The noun 'lies' is an abstract noun, the plural for of the singular noun 'lie'; a word for a falsehood, an untruth; a word for a concept.
The word 'lies' is also the third person singular present of the verb to lie (lies, lying, lied, lay, lain).
The abstract noun forms for the verb to deceive are deception, and the gerund (verbal noun) deceiving.
The concrete noun form of the verb to deceive is deceiver, a word for a person.
The noun 'lies' is an abstract noun, the plural for of the singular noun 'lie'; a word for a falsehood, an untruth; a word for a concept.
A collective noun is a word used to group people or things taken together as one whole in a descriptive way. The collective noun for the noun 'lies' is a pack of lies.
The word 'lies' is also the third person singular present of the verb to lie (lies, lying, lied, lay, lain).
The word 'lie' is an abstract noun; a word for an untruth, something said to deliberately deceive. Another noun form is 'liar', one who lies.
Lie
The collective noun is an anthology of poems.
No, the word attitude is not a collective noun; attitude is a singular noun, common, abstract noun. A collective noun names a group of things such as a bouquet of flowers or a pair of shoes.A collective noun for attitudes is a range of attitudes.
No, the noun 'politics' is a plural (uncountable), common, abstract noun.A collective noun is a noun used to group people or things in a descriptive way; for example, an equivocation of politicians.
No, a collective noun is a word for a group of people or things. Angel is not a word for a group, angel is an individual.The noun angel is a singular, common, abstract noun. Some collective nouns for angels are a host of angels or a choir of angels.
No, the noun 'failure' is a singular, common, abstract noun.A collective noun is a noun used to group people or things in a descriptive way; for example, a series of failures or a heap of failures.
The collective noun for the noun 'lies' is a pack of lies.
The collective noun for the noun 'lies' is a pack of lies.
Concrete noun
Abstract noun.
No. It is an abstract noun.
The collective noun is an anthology of poems.
No, the noun 'victory' is not a collective noun.The collective noun for victories is a series of victories.
No, "lies" is not an abstract noun. It is a plural noun that refers to false statements or deception. Abstract nouns are usually qualities, concepts, or ideas that cannot be perceived by the senses, such as love or happiness.
The noun group is a singular, common noun. The noun group can be used as a concrete or an abstract noun; the noun group can be used as a collective noun. Concrete, collective: a group of people, a group of furniture. Abstract, collective: a group of opinions, a group of principles.
No, religion is not a collective noun. The noun religion is a singular, common, abstract noun. A collective noun is a word to group like things, such as a team of players or a stable of horses.
No, the word attitude is not a collective noun; attitude is a singular noun, common, abstract noun. A collective noun names a group of things such as a bouquet of flowers or a pair of shoes.A collective noun for attitudes is a range of attitudes.
The noun 'democracy' is an abstract noun, a word for a system of government.A collective noun is a noun used to group people or things; for example:a union of statesa slate of candidatesan alliance of countriesa congress of representatives