"Cousin" is a common noun.
The possessive noun form of "cousin" is "cousin's." This form indicates that something belongs to or is related to a cousin.
"Cousin" is a common noun that refers to a general relationship within a family. It becomes a proper noun when used with a specific name, such as "Cousin Sarah."
The noun cousin is the singular form. The plural noun is cousins.
"cousin" is a noun one way is, "I have a cousin." I am going to visit my cousin who lives in Holland.
The possessive of a single noun is formed by adding 's, so this is correct! [see Essentials of English Grammar, by L. Sue Baugh, 2005, p. 57
The word cousin is a common noun, the word Scott is a proper noun. When used to name the person, Cousin Scott, you can use cousin as a proper noun.
The common noun is cousin.
The possessive noun form of "cousin" is "cousin's." This form indicates that something belongs to or is related to a cousin.
The noun cousin is the singular form; the plural noun is cousins.
"Cousin" is a common noun that refers to a general relationship within a family. It becomes a proper noun when used with a specific name, such as "Cousin Sarah."
No. The word cousin is a noun. It is a relative through your parents or other ancestors.
The noun cousin is the singular form. The plural noun is cousins.
No, cousin is not a proper noun, it is a common noun, a general word for the child of your aunt or your uncle.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place or thing; for example, the movie My Cousin Vinny, Two Cousins' Lobster Shack, or Cousin Lane in London UK.
It is concrete. Concrete nouns refer to things that physically exist. A cousin is a person, and thus physically exists.
The possessive noun is Jean's (the cousin of Jean).
The word cousin is a noun. No, because verbs are words that show action. run, jump, swim, etc.
Use 'is' when he/she/it or a singular noun is the subject. He is my cousin. She is my cousin. It is mine. The policeman is my brother. -- policeman = singular noun subject.