Yes, "creatures" is a regular plural noun. It is formed by adding the standard plural suffix "-s" to the singular noun "creature." This follows the general rule for most nouns in English, where adding "-s" or "-es" creates the plural form.
yeah
Yes
No, creatures is a plural noun.
The noun is creatures.The pronoun is what (an interrogative pronoun).The adjective is these (describing the noun creatures).
The possessive form for the plural noun creatures is creatures'.
Well actually mesas is the plurl for mesa.
No, the noun creatures' is the possessive form of the plural noun creatures.The singular possessive form is creature's.
in your question, no..."a predicate noun" is the predicate noun he was a creature...yes
Yes, the plural noun 'insects' is a concrete noun, a word for physical creatures.
It depends on the context it is used in. The word 'regular' is both a noun and an adjective.The noun 'regular' is a word for a clothing size, a habitual customer, a dependable, loyal person.Example:He's a regular at the local tavern. (noun)The regular driver is off this week. (adjective)
There are three nouns in this sentence. They are: animals, creatures, and earth.
The noun form is regularity.