The noun 'orchard' is a collective noun for an orchard of fruit trees and an orchard of trees.
No, orchard is a common noun unless it is the name of a specific person, place, or thing such as Orchard Park, NY or Bailey's Orchard, in Whitefield, ME.
The word orchard - is usually used to describe a group of (usually fruit) trees.
An orchard is a noun and has no obvious antonym, unlike an adjective or adverb. If orchards are intended to have ripe fruit then the opposite would be a desert.
The collective noun for luxury cars is the same as the collective noun for any type of car, a fleet of luxury cars.
There is no specific collective noun for the noun 'guineps', in which case a noun suitable for the situation can be used; for example, an orchard of guineps, a bushel of guineps, a bag of guineps, etc.
they usually mean what you have told about. sort of like a conclusion
The word "orchard" comes from the Old English word "ortgeard" and the Latin word "hortus" which means "garden." The words both originally referred to a yard of some sort.
The noun 'sort' is an abstract noun as a word for a category of things or people that have something in common; a type; a word for a concept.The noun 'sort' is a concrete noun as a word for an act of arranging something by type; a word for a physical act.The abstract noun form of the verb to 'sort' is the gerund, sorting.
A basket is a common noun.
Yes. If one was referring to the trees within a single orchard, one would write the orchard's trees.If one was referring to many orchards, one would write the orchards' trees. It has now become a plural possessive.
Sort as a verb is: ordenar, clasificar Sort as a noun is: tipo