The noun Hudson Street is a singular, concrete, proper noun as the name of a specific street.
The noun streets is a plural, common, concrete noun; a word for a public road in a city or town; the part of the road between the pavements, used by vehicles; a word for a thing.
Yes, the plural noun 'streets' is a common noun; a general word for any streets anywhere.
The possessive form of the plural noun streets is streets'.Example: The number streets' direction is north and south, the alpha streets are east and west.
Litter is noun and a verb. Noun: The streets are covered in litter. Verb: The partygoers littered the streets.
The term 'Paris streets' is two nouns. The word 'Paris' is a proper noun, the name of a specific place. The word 'streets' is a common noun, a general word for any streets in Paris; a word for things.A verb is a word for an action or a state of being. Examples:I was on the Paris streets. (the verb 'was' is the state of being there)I walked the Paris streets. (the verb 'walked' is an action)
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No, city is a common noun. Used with other nouns (city bus, city streets), it is a noun adjunct.
What type of noun is childhood
No, city is a noun. It can be used as an adjunct (city streets, city government).
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What type of noun is the word Dell computer What type of noun is the word Dell computer