Another word for an underwater creature is a deep sea creature. Deep sea creatures include the cornuta, the giant isopod and the humpback anglerfish.
We'd call the underwater geographic feature thus described a tablemount or guyot. It's a seamount, which is an underwater mountain, with a flat or platform top.
The word 'creatures' does not have a prefix. The root word is create and the ending is changed to 'ures' to denote that it is a thing that has been created.
No, the word 'creatures' is a noun, the plural form of the noun 'creature', a word for a thing.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.The pronouns that take the place of the plural noun 'creatures' are they as a subject and them as an object in a sentence.Example:What are the creatures in the fish tank? They are very colorful. The children enjoy watching them.
Yes, the noun 'creature' is a common noun, a general word for a living being (a person or an animal); a general word for an imaginary or fictional being; a word for any creature of any kind.
There is no abstract noun form for the concrete noun 'creature'. The noun 'creature' is a word for a person, animal or other being, real or fictional. Fictional and imaginary people or things are considered concrete nouns.
The word starfish is a simple portmanteau. It is made from the word "star", which describes the shape of the creature, and "fish", because it is an underwater creature.
A creature is generally any living thing that is not human. So, yes.
being(s)
creatures of the sea
an animal that lives underwater
shrimp
Creature, organism
yes
Whale sharks
Devil fiend
sealife creature / sealife animals / sealife / underwater mamals / underwater creatures
underwater. he is a sea creature! beware