Fireman is singular and firemen is plural
no
The noun firefighter is a concrete noun when referring to a specific person or persons. When used as a general term, for example, "I want to be a firefighter or a jet pilot.", it's an abstract noun.
Yes it is. A noun is a person, a place, or a thing. A firefighter is a person. Years ago, a person in this occupation was usually called a "fireman" but these days, there are also women who fight fires, so the noun was changed to the more gender-neutral "firefighter."
No. its a noun. adverbs are words that describe verbs
Pompiere is an Italian equivalent of the English word "firefighter." The pronunciation of the masculine singular noun will be "pom-PYEH-rey" in Italian.
No, it is a noun. A fireman (firefighter) is a person.
No, the word 'firefighter' is a singular, common, compound noun; a word for a person.A collective noun is a word used to group people or things taken together as one whole.Some collective nouns that might be used for the noun firefighters are a company of firefighters, acrew of firefighters, a squad of firefighters, etc.
Yes, the noun 'firefighter' is a descriptive noun, a noun that give you a picture of the person or thing.For example, in the sentence, "People put out the fire.", a perfectly correct sentence but it doesn't give a clue who those people are (passersby, neighbors, the family?). The sentence, "Firefighters put out the fire." tells you that the fire was put out by professionals and it was probably put out safely.
The common nouns in the sentence are:firefighterhosefire
That is the correct spelling of "firefighter" (fireman).
firefighters': The local tinsmith made the firefighters' buckets.
a firefighter