The word butter is an uncountable noun. Thus, it doesn't have a separate plural form.
a proper noun
Type can be a noun, as in, "She was the type of teacher to give too much homework," or, "Benjamin Franklin spent his days setting type."
The noun thunder is a singular, common, concrete noun, a word for a thing.
There is no opposite of the noun type, meaning group or classification.The verb "to type" could have the alternative "to print" (by hand), and the noun type meaning typed text could have the alternative "handwriting."
The word butter is an uncountable noun. Thus, it doesn't have a separate plural form.
The noun 'butter' is a mass (non-count) noun, a word for a substance. Multiples are expressed as some butter, more butter, sticks of butter, tablespoons of butter, etc. The plural form is reserved for 'types of' or 'kinds of' butters, for example: They sell a selection of butters, like sesame butter, almond butter, and cocoa butter.
No
No, butter can be used as a verb or a noun but not an adverb.Noun: He likes butter on his toast.Verb: He butters his toast.
no it is not
There is no standard collective noun for butter.As a uncountable noun for a substance, the best you can do is use the forms that butter comes in or is used in, such as a pound of butter, a stick of butter, a cup of butter.
The possessive form for the noun butter is butter's.example: The butter's price has gone up again.
Butter is an emulsion.
No, the compound noun 'peanut butter sandwich' is a common noun, a word for any peanut butter sandwich of any kind.A proper noun is the name of a person, place, thing, or a title; for example:Peanut Butter & Company, New York, NYSandwich Lodge & Resort, Cape Cod,MA"The Peanut Butter Cookbook" by Mable Hoffman"400 Best Sandwich Recipes" by Alison Lewis
Peanut butter and butter.
No, "butter" is an uncountable noun in the singular form according to the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary.
No. Peanut is a noun. When paired with another noun, it is correctly described as a noun adjunct, not an adjective.