When a bird feathers its nest, it lines the nest with soft feathers. The idiom means to make your life comfortable by earning more money.
Yes, the word 'nest' is a collective noun for:a nest of bowlsa nest of crocodilesa nest of hornetsa nest of machine gunsa nest of micea nest of pheasantsa nest of rabbitsa nest of rumorsa nest of snakesa nest of termitesa nest of toadsa nest of turtlesa nest of vipersa nest of vulturesa nest of wasps
It just means really messy I guess.
No, the word 'honeybees' is simply the plural form of the noun honeybee. A collective noun is a word used to group nouns that share a commonality; for example: The collective nouns for bees are a hive of bees, a swarm of bees, a cluster of bees.
A pronoun for the word nest is 'it'.
It depends how you are using it. If you say "The bird made a nest in the tree" nest is a noun. If you use it like "The bird nested in the birdhouse" then nest is the verb.
In Walt Disney's Mary Poppins (1964) the reference to a robin's nest is found in the song "Spoonful of Sugar". A robin feathering his nest Has very little time to rest While gathering his bits of twine and twig Though quite intent in his pursuit He has a merry tune to toot He knows a song will move the job along
Feathering
Feathering is a uneven edge wear that can make the edge of the tire look like a saw blade.
eagle's nest
You mean what rhymes with nest? there's a lot of things that rhymes with nest: test, best, vest, pest, lest, and a lot more
The term "nest egg" refers to ones financial savings for retirement.
No, nether does feather
Feathering is a form of heat induced coagulation. In coffee: protein in milk is destabilised and coagulates by the heat to form white flecks on the surface.
If you mean nest, their preferred nest sites are in rocky crevices found on cliff faces.
Sand the fiberglass with a 400 - 1000 grit sandpaper so you can not feel a difference between the fibergass filler and the body of the car. Now you can prime it.
No, not really.
"Ken" also means nest, as in a bird's nest.