Yes, the noun 'jungle' is a common noun, a general word for any area of land covered with a dense growth of tropical vegetation.
The noun tiger is a common noun, a general word for a type of cat; a general word for any tiger of any kind.A proper noun is the name or title of a specific person, place, or thing; for example:Eldrick "Tiger" WoodsTiger, GA (pop. 316)Tiger River, Free State, South Africa (pop. approx. 1000)"The Tiger" ("The Tyger"), a poem by William Blake
No jungle is only a Noun.
The noun 'jungle' is not a standard collective noun for a specific group. It does, however, lend itself to any number of 'tangled' situations; for example, a jungle of regulations or a jungle of relationships.
a jungle bandit, a jungle killer or a jungle smuggler or a jungle robber, a jungle thief or a jungle criminal, jungle crime syndicate
A material noun can be a common noun or a proper noun, depending on use. Some examples:common nounsbrick wallcotton shirtbutter cookiesmarble statueplastic cupproper nouns'Steel Magnolias' 1989 movieSilver Spring, MDSugar Land, TXIron Mountain, MI'Asphalt Jungle' 1950 movie
No, the word jungle is a singular, common noun. The possessive form is jungle's.Example: The sounds of the jungle's creatures woke us at dawn.
The noun tiger is a common noun, a general word for a type of cat; a general word for any tiger of any kind.A proper noun is the name or title of a specific person, place, or thing; for example:Eldrick "Tiger" WoodsTiger, GA (pop. 316)Tiger River, Free State, South Africa (pop. approx. 1000)"The Tiger" ("The Tyger"), a poem by William Blake
No jungle is only a Noun.
Jungle is a noun.
The noun 'jungle' is not a standard collective noun for a specific group. It does, however, lend itself to any number of 'tangled' situations; for example, a jungle of regulations or a jungle of relationships.
Jungle is "la jungle" (feminine noun) in French.
a jungle bandit, a jungle killer or a jungle smuggler or a jungle robber, a jungle thief or a jungle criminal, jungle crime syndicate
A material noun can be a common noun or a proper noun, depending on use. Some examples:common nounsbrick wallcotton shirtbutter cookiesmarble statueplastic cupproper nouns'Steel Magnolias' 1989 movieSilver Spring, MDSugar Land, TXIron Mountain, MI'Asphalt Jungle' 1950 movie
The noun jungle is a countable noun, the plural form is jungles; for example The jungles of South America...
yes, because it is a place
common noun
This is likely the proper noun "Massachusetts" (a US state).A similar common word is machete, plural machetes, for long jungle knives.