Yes, "wildlife" is a common noun. It refers to all living organisms that are not domesticated, encompassing various species of animals and plants found in their natural habitats. Common nouns are general terms that do not refer to specific names or titles, and "wildlife" fits this definition.
wild is an adjective...
The common noun is the sentence is life.
The noun life is a singular, common, abstract noun.
it is a singular, common, collective noun.
The term 'wild animal' (plural 'wild animals') is a noun, a common, compound noun; a word for creatures, things. The compound noun 'wild animals' is made up of the adjective 'wild' and the noun 'animals' to form a word with its own meaning.
The word life is a common noun. Any common noun can be a proper noun if it is used as a name or a title. Examples: Life is Beautiful (1997), It's a Wonderful Life (1946), or the Word of Life Fellowship.
It is appropriate to say that the word "Life" is an abstract noun.
Oh, dude, "wild" is an adjective, not a noun. It's like when you describe your friend's party as wild, you're not saying the party is a wild, you're saying it's crazy or out of control. So, yeah, "wild" is an adjective, not a noun.
The noun 'youth' is a singular, common noun. The noun 'youth' is a abstract noun as a word for a period in life. The noun 'youth' is a concrete noun as a word for a person.
Proper for a
Oh, dude, 'wild' is actually an adjective, not a common noun. Common nouns are like 'dog' or 'car' - you know, everyday stuff. 'Wild' just describes how crazy and untamed something is, like my hair in the morning.
No, the word 'lived' is the past tense of the verb to live.The word 'live' is also an adjective.The related noun form is life (a common noun; a general word for any life of any kind).