The noun 'kittens' is a plural, common, concrete noun; a word for a type of mammal; a word for things.
The collective noun for kittens and puppies is a litter of kittens and a litter of puppies.
Mischievous is an adjective (unless it is a person's name, then it's a proper noun).Ex. Two mischievous kittens were playing together. (mischievous is the adjective, which describes the noun, which is kittens)
The standard collective noun for puppies is a litterof puppies.
Litter in the context of trash on the ground has no group noun of its own. Litter is the context of newborn animals is the collective noun. Example: A litter of kittens was nestled in a basket.
What type of noun is the word Dell computer What type of noun is the word Dell computer
The collective noun for kittens and puppies is a litter of kittens and a litter of puppies.
Yes, "kitten" is a common noun.
No, kittens is a plural noun. One rarely-seen adverb form is kittenishly.
A plural noun.
Mischievous is an adjective (unless it is a person's name, then it's a proper noun).Ex. Two mischievous kittens were playing together. (mischievous is the adjective, which describes the noun, which is kittens)
The standard collective noun for puppies is a litterof puppies.
The possessive form is the kitten's fur.
Yes, there are free kittens available on Craigslist. In the search bar, type "free kittens" and there will be some ads for people giving away kittens.
The collective nouns for kittens are:a kendle of kittensa kindle of kittensan intrigue of kittensa litter of kittens (if they were born together)
you could go on Google or yahoo and say you doing a report on cats and kittens and you type in cats and kittens but you only get cats you could type cats AND kittens and you will make a great report by gus Peterson
Litter in the context of trash on the ground has no group noun of its own. Litter is the context of newborn animals is the collective noun. Example: A litter of kittens was nestled in a basket.
A noun is a word for a person, a place, or a thing.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.Examples:When George got to 19th Street, he got off the train. ('George' is a noun for a person; the pronoun 'he' takes the place of the noun 'George' as the subject of the second part of the sentence)Our picnic at the park was nice. It has picnic tables and grills for public use. ('park' is a noun for a place; the pronoun 'it' takes the place of the noun 'park' in the second sentence)The kittens are only a week old. I will let you know when they are weaned. ('kittens' is a plural noun for things; the pronoun 'they' takes the place of the noun 'kittens' in the second part of the sentence)