Yes. A cow (female bovine animal) is a concrete noun.
The noun 'cattle' is a common, concrete, plural noun for bovines kept for the purpose of food or labor animals. The noun 'cattle' is sometimes used as an alternate plural for cows.
Concrete. (You can see it, feel it, bite it!)
Yes, the word 'cow' is a noun, a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a type of animal, a word for a living thing.The word 'cow' is also a verb: to make someone do what you want by frightening them.
The noun 'cafeteria' is a concrete noun as a word for a physical place.
The noun 'Philadelphia' is a concrete noun, a word for a physical place.
Concrete. (But few bathtubs are made out of concrete.)
The collective noun for cows (of any kind) is a herd of cows or a herd of jersey cows.
The noun 'oranges' is the plural form for the noun orange, a common, concrete noun; a word for a thing.
cows
The noun 'kind' is an abstract noun. There is no form for kind that is a concrete noun.
its a concr
There is no concrete noun for the abstract noun 'education'. The noun 'education' is a word for a concept; an idea.