Yes.
The Tagalog word for toothbrush is "sipilyo."
Yes, the word toothbrush is a noun; a singular, common, concrete, compound noun, a word for a thing.
"Toothbrush" is countable because you can refer to one toothbrush or multiple toothbrushes.
sepilyo. from spanish but that's how we say it in tagalog.
A word formed from two words is called a compound word. Examples include "rainbow", "toothbrush", and "baseball".
One word
Toothbrush is a noun.
The Tagalog word for toothbrush is "sipilyo."
You can get a toothbrush from the pharmacist or anywhere at all!
"Toothbrush" is countable because you can refer to one toothbrush or multiple toothbrushes.
They like rubber on your toothbrush and they also like toothpaste. Be sure to rinse/clean your toothbrush at all times and get a new one every 1-3 months - hygiene reasons.
nope
Sonicare toothbrush heads can be purchased at most discount stores. Walmart, Target, and KMart all have them. They can also be found at drugstores like Walgreens.
Toothbrush
Maybe because before they invented one, nobody brushed their teeth, so when they started , they only had one tooth left. Just a thought though, that's probably not the reason. I beileve the answer is this: The first toothbrush recorded in history was made in 3000 B.C., the toothbrush was called a chewstick, which was a twig with a frayed end used to brush each tooth, one at a time. Hence the name toothbrush.
Yes, that is the correct possessive form of the singular noun toothbrush. example: Don't buy that one, the toothbrush's cover is cracked.
maybe a contraption that has a toothbrush, hairbrush, and a tube of toothpaste all in one. or, maybe a camera that shoots toothpaste onto your toothbrush.