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.
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.
Concrete. (You can see it, feel it, bite it!)
The noun 'cafeteria' is a concrete noun as a word for a physical place.
The collective noun for cows (of any kind) is a herd of cows or a herd of jersey cows.
Concrete. (But few bathtubs are made out of concrete.)
The noun 'Philadelphia' is a concrete noun, a word for a physical place.
The noun 'oranges' is the plural form for the noun orange, a common, concrete noun; a word for a thing.
cows
its a concr
The noun 'kind' is an abstract noun. There is no form for kind that is a concrete noun.
There is no concrete noun for the abstract noun 'education'. The noun 'education' is a word for a concept; an idea.