The plural form of the noun visitor is visitors.
Yes
Yes, visitors is the plural of the noun 'visitor', a word for a person.
No, visitors is not a collective noun. The noun visitors is the plural form for the singular form visitor. A collective noun is a word used to group other nouns. Some collective nouns for visitors are a flock of visitors or a stream of visitors.
indirect object
The plural form of the noun visitor is visitors.
Abstract noun
Yes
Yes
The word visitor is a noun. A visitor is someone who visits someone or somewhere else.
Yes, visitors is the plural of the noun 'visitor', a word for a person.
The plural form of the noun visitor is visitors.The plural possessive form is visitors'.example: We have everything arranged for our visitors' comfort.
According to the Merriam-Webster Dictionary, the English word “hospital” in the beginning comes from the Latin noun “hospes”, which stands for “a visitor or visitor” and “one who gives lodging or enjoyment for a guest or visitor.
No it is not. Guest can be noun (visitor, client), an adjective, or more rarely a verb (to host, to treat as a guest).
No, visitors is not a collective noun. The noun visitors is the plural form for the singular form visitor. A collective noun is a word used to group other nouns. Some collective nouns for visitors are a flock of visitors or a stream of visitors.
indirect object
Although a noun cannot have an opposite as such, the complementary term would be 'host'.