Michael Pena
Not at all because its buried in rubble.
They were starving and they were buried under rubble and they were left without homes.
There is no specific collective noun for the noun 'rubble', in which case a noun suitable for the situation can be used; for example, a pile of rubble, a heap of rubble, a mountain of rubble, etc.
Theres mount vesuvius which buried the town of pompeii in ash and rubble and the most recent eruption was the icelandic volcanos ash cloud.
No. Rubble is a noun.
Betty Rubble.
After the earthquake, the town was left in ruins, with piles of rubble lining the streets.
No, it is not an adverb. The word rubble is a noun (debris).
Betty Rubble was created in 1960.
Ragged Rubble was created in 2004.
rubble - broken stones or bricks from a building or wall that has been destroyed. The town was reduced to rubble after the war.
In just about every way. Everything in this solar system is believed to have been at least at one time a piece of rubble like the asteroids. In the case of our own moon, a body about the size of Mars may have impacted the Earth; then the leftover rubble from this off-center hit formed the Moon. If that theory is correct even our own Moon was a piece of rubble.