The odd word out is "countyman." Unlike "citizens," "compatriots," and "people," which all refer to groups of individuals in a societal context, "countyman" is not a widely recognized term and does not fit with the theme of collective identity or belonging.
'Compatriots' refer to people who are from the same country or share the same nationality. It is often used to describe individuals who have a common homeland or citizenship.
Citizens, everyone, humans, or our population
The word "citizens" is a plural noun.
People in Iceland are called "Icelanders".The Icelandic word for people is: fólk.
No, the word 'citizens' is the plural form of the noun 'citizen'.A collective noun is a word used to group people or things taken together as one whole in a descriptive way. Examples:a group of citizensa crowd of citizensa mob of citizens
Yes, "citizens" is a noun. It refers to people who are members of a particular country and have rights and responsibilities within that country.
No, the word 'citizen' is a singular, common noun, a word for a person. A collective noun is a word used to group people or things taken together as one whole in a descriptive way. Some nouns that can be used as a collective noun for the noun 'citizen' are a crowd of citizens, a mob of citizens, a committee of citizens, etc.
Yes, the plural noun 'citizens' is a concrete noun, a word for physical people.
People in Iceland are called "Icelanders".The Icelandic word for people is: fólk.
People from different diversities come to US to become citizens
Democracy came from the greek word "demos"means people and "kratos"means power.(power of the people)
The word 'citizens' is a plural noun, a word for people.citizen -- singularcitizens -- plural