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No, both 'birds' and 'wings' are nouns, the plural form of the nouns 'bird' and 'wing'.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence. The pronouns that take the place of the nouns 'birds' or 'wings' are they as a subject, and them as an object in a sentence.If you are trying to say 'the wings of the bird', then the noun 'bird' must be in the possessive form to show that the wings belong to the bird: the bird's wings.Or, if you mean 'the wings of the birds', you need the plural possessive form for the plural noun birds: the birds' wings.
hayai for fast not the bird, i think it is amatsubame
hayai for fast not the bird, i think it is tsubame
I can flutter like a bird. Can you make your arms flutter like birds' wings?
the only thing that makes a bird a bird is the wings. no other animal (with the exception of the bat) has wings
The word "Sphinx" came from the greek language, there is a similar creature with the wings of a bird, the body of a tiger and the face of a women, and they called it the sphinx
To "plane" means to soar or glide, based on a French word that refers to the position of a bird's wings in flight. Therefore, an airplane is a vehicle that soars through the air like a bird.
In general terms yes, but the word "thing" is usually used for inanimate objects and when used on an animate one would convey a meaning of disparagement.
M-is for the Mud flaps she gave me for my truck O-is for the Oil I put in my hair T-is for T-bird H-is for Haggard E-is for Eggs R-is for Redneck
Hayabusa is the Japanese word for a peregrine falcon--a very fast, aggressive bird. It is also a motorcycle
You didn't specify what context you wanted. The term can be a noun or a verb and can mean several different things.The flag flaps in the breeze.The airplane's flaps were down.
Everyone knows that the bird is the word