No, geese is a noun. It's the plural form of goose.
The nouns are:memberswaterfowl (attributive noun describing the noun 'family')familygeeseflocksautumnThe adjectives are: otherlargeeach
Canadian geese
hmmmmm......... grosse geese if you are trying to make a aliteration then it could be any word with the sound of g check in a dictionary
No. It is not an adjective. An adjective describes something.
Yes, it is an adjective.
No Gaggle is a group of geese or other fowl .It is an adjective.
Canada geese, white-fronted geese, emperor geese, Brant geese, lesser snow geese, Ross geese, and Aleutian geese.
geese fact ...... geese fact ......
The plurals of the nouns are: deep - deeps (the adjective deep has no plural) nappy - nappies foot - feet man - men goose - geese elf - elves
Geese. Look at the goose! (one goose) Look at the geese! (two geese.
A skein of geese is a group of geese IN FLIGHT
The correct term is "geese". There were many geese in the sky.
Geese is the plural of Goose. There is not a plural form of Geese.
A group of geese is called a Gaggle. geese
It is a litter of puppies
Geese is actually the collective term for goose.
geese or geese from the north