yes sunshine is a concrete noun
No, sun is a concrete noun, a noun that can be experienced by one or more of the five senses; it can be seen, heard, smelled, tasted, or touched. The sun can be seen, it's heat can be felt and measured with instruments. The sun is a physical thing.
The collective noun is a ray of sunshine.
Concrete. (You can see it, feel it, bite it!)
The noun 'cafeteria' is a concrete noun as a word for a physical place.
Door to success is an abstract noun. It depends
Sunshine is concrete. Even though it consists only of energy, that energy has a comparable degree of physical presence, and measurable, observable existence, to a solid object. It is not abstract.
No, sun is a concrete noun, a noun that can be experienced by one or more of the five senses; it can be seen, heard, smelled, tasted, or touched. The sun can be seen, it's heat can be felt and measured with instruments. The sun is a physical thing.
The collective noun is a ray of sunshine.
Concrete. (You can see it, feel it, bite it!)
The noun 'cafeteria' is a concrete noun as a word for a physical place.
In the sentence, "You are my sunshine.", there is no proper noun. you = second person pronoun are = verb my = possessive adjective sunshine = common noun
Door to success is an abstract noun. It depends
No, the noun 'California' is a singular, proper, concrete noun, but not a collective noun. A collective noun is a word used to group people or things taken together as one whole in a descriptive way; for example, a ray of sunshine, a grove of oranges, a fleetof ships
The noun 'Philadelphia' is a concrete noun, a word for a physical place.
Concrete. (But few bathtubs are made out of concrete.)
Is cheer an abstract noun or a concrete noun??????
Not. The noun 'sunshine' is a concrete noun, a word for a physical thing that can be seen and its warmth felt. Abstract nouns are word for things that your five senses cannot detect. You can't see them, hear them, smell them, taste them, or touch them. They are words for things that you know, learn, think, understand, or feel emotionally.