Yes the word chunks is a noun. It is the plural of chunk.
Chunks with the s on the end
The word 'noun' is not a verb. The word 'noun' is a noun, a word for a thing.
Yes, its a noun in the plural.Yes, its a noun in the plural.Yes, its a noun in the plural.Yes, its a noun in the plural.Yes, its a noun in the plural.Yes, its a noun in the plural.Yes, its a noun in the plural.Yes, its a noun in the plural.Yes, its a noun in the plural.
It is a noun
The noun postmistress is a gender specific noun for a female. The noun postmaster is a gender specific noun for a male.
No, chunks is a noun. Chunky would be an adjective.
An appositive is a noun or noun phrase that renames another noun or pronoun just before it.The appositive phrase is the winning recipe, which renames the noun phrase 'cookies with chocolate chunks'.
The noun ice, the word for frozen water is an uncountable noun; parts or divisions are expressed as 'pieces of ice', 'chunks of ice', or 'ice cubes', etc.The noun ice, the word for a frozen desert is a countable noun; for example 'Bring three lemon ices when you come back from lunch.'
The noun ice, the word for frozen water is an uncountable noun; parts or divisions are expressed as 'pieces of ice', 'chunks of ice', or 'ice cubes', etc.The noun ice, the word for a frozen desert is a countable noun; for example 'Bring three lemon ices when you come back from lunch.'
Blow'n Chunks was created in 1984.
No. Chunks are what come off icebergs.
Chunks with the s on the end
Fist Sized Chunks was created in 1989.
If the chunks appear after two aqueous solutions are combined, it is called precipitation. The chunks would then be called the precipitate.
After the storm, the kids made a fort out of chunks of ice and snow.
Chunks of fish, chicken livers, hot dog chunks, worms.
because they are little chips of the potato not big chunks