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 ......
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.
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 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