Yes, it is a place.
Yes, the noun 'kitchen' is a common noun; a general word for any room or area where food is prepared and cooked.
No, the noun 'kitchen' is a common noun; a general word for any room or area where food is prepared and cooked.A proper noun is the name or title of a specific person, place, or thing; for example, KitchenAid (appliances) or Kitchen Street in Jonesboro, AR.
No, the word 'of' is not a noun.The word 'of' is a preposition, a word that shows a relationship between a noun or a pronoun and another word in a sentence.Examples:She told me what she knew of them. (the preposition 'of' connects the pronoun 'them' to the verb 'knew')The color of the kitchen is sunny yellow. (the preposition 'of' connects the noun 'kitchen' to the noun 'color')
No, the noun 'kitchen' is not a standard collective noun.A collective noun is a word used to group people or things taken together as one whole in a descriptive way.A collective noun is an informal part of language. Any noun that suits the context of a situation can function as a collective noun; for example, a kitchen of treats, a kitchen of orderliness, a kitchen of chaos, etc.
Yes, the word cooker is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a large piece of kitchen equipment that is used for cooking, a word for a thing.
The Latin feminine noun culina can mean a kitchen, or food, or victuals.
A small room or closet, usually next to a kitchen, where items such as dry goods are stored.
The noun 'chef' is a common gender noun, a word for a male or a female cook in charge of a kitchen.
The noun 'here' is a word for 'in this place'. The noun 'there' is a word for 'in, at, or to that place'. Example sentences: Here is the shop I was telling you about. There are some apples in the kitchen.
No. A compound noun is one which is formed by combining two separate words to make a new one. The example that comes up first in a Google search is the word toothpaste, which is formed from the words tooth and paste, but has the same meaning as neither of them.
The noun 'areas' is a common, plural noun (the plural form of the noun 'area'); a word for things.The noun 'areas' is a concrete noun as a word for regions or parts of a place; spaces allocated for a specific use; parts of an object or surface; measurements of a surface or a piece of land; a word for a physical places or things.The noun 'areas' is an abstract noun as a word for divisions of experience, activity, or knowledge; a word for a concept.
child, lunch, kitchen=noun very=adverb small,=adjective had eaten=verb in=preposition the=modifier