Yes, there is no other definition of cabbage other than the name of the vegetable.
Cabbage is not a proper noun as it is only capitalized when it is at the beginning of a sentence. example: A cabbage is a vegetable that is used to make coleslaw.
Yes, cabbage is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a vegetable, a thing.
There is no specific collective noun for cabbage, in which case a noun suitable for the context of the sentence, for example a field of cabbage, a truckload of cabbage, a sack of cabbage, etc.
Cabbage is a common noun because it refers to a general type of vegetable rather than a specific, unique entity. Proper nouns are used for specific names of people, places, or things.
In the context of linguistics, an antecedent refers to a word or phrase that a pronoun or another word refers back to. Cabbage, as a noun, does not serve as an antecedent unless it is used in a specific sentence where it precedes and refers back to a pronoun. For example, in the sentence "The cabbage was fresh, and it looked delicious," "cabbage" is the antecedent of "it."
No, cabbage is not fattening. 1 cup of chopped cabbage is only 22 calories.
¨Only¨ is used with an eventual noun after it. ¨Only¨ can be followed by a noun, verb or an adjective. All of these examples will eventually contain a noun later in a complete sentence. ¨Alone¨ is used with nothing after.
Cabbage and vinegar, or cabbage and salt.
Red Cabbage and Beetroot can be used but what else?
The plural form for the singular noun cabbage is cabbages(no 'i').
Only if you consider a "pair of pants" a singular noun. (No.)
No, piston can only be used as a noun.