No, kangaroos is a common, concrete noun, the plural form of the singular kangaroo. A collective noun is a word for a group of things; the collective nouns for kangaroos are a troop of kangaroos or a mob of kangaroos.
The plural possessive of kangaroo is kangaroos'.
An option is a noun. It names a person, place or thing.
The personal pronoun that takes the place of the noun 'kangaroo' is it.Example: A kangaroo stood by the road. It looked at us quizzically.
The collective noun for kangaroos is a mob, troop, or court. Kangaroos are often colloquially referred to as roos. Male kangaroos are called bucks, boomers, jacks, or old men; females are does, flyers, or jills, and the young ones are joeys.
Kangaroos are born as kangaroos.
The noun 'troop' is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a group of people or things. The noun 'troop' functions as a collective noun for: a troop of Brownies a troop of dogfish a troop of gorillas a troop of kangaroos a troop of monkeys a troop of soldiers
No, kangaroo is a singular, common, concrete noun.A common noun can become a proper noun if it is used for the name of a specific person, place, thing, or a title, such as KangaROOS, the shoes with pockets, The Kangaroo Conservation Park in Dawsonville Georgia, or the movie 'Kangaroo Jack'.
The verb is are strange is an describing word which are called adjectives and kangeroos would be an common noun .
Is what a connective?
kangaroos are not found in the wild in England. Kangaroos are native to Australia.
No, kangaroos cannot speak English.No, kangaroos cannot speak English.No, kangaroos cannot speak English.No, kangaroos cannot speak English.No, kangaroos cannot speak English.No, kangaroos cannot speak English.No, kangaroos cannot speak English.No, kangaroos cannot speak English.No, kangaroos cannot speak English.No, kangaroos cannot speak English.No, kangaroos cannot speak English.