Yes, "drives" can be considered a common noun when it refers to general concepts such as the act of driving or various types of drives (like motivational drives or data drives). However, in specific contexts, such as referring to a particular drive (e.g., "the drive to succeed"), it may not function as a common noun. Overall, it typically denotes a general idea rather than a specific entity.
No. "Drives" is an action, it is something you can do. Anything you can "do" is a verb.
Common noun
common
Pea is a common noun, and peas is the plural...still a common noun.
A common noun.
Most definitely a common noun.
Yes, drum is a noun, a common, singular noun. Drum can also be a verb or an adjective. Examples:As a noun: My new drum was gift from my brother.As a verb: It drives me crazy when you drum your fingers on the table.As an adjective: The drum beat was clearly heard from the back of the orchestra.
The word 'drives' is the plural form of the noun drive, and the third person, singular present of the verb to drive. Examples:noun: We take drives along the park ridge to see the foliage.verb: He drives a car to work.
Th word tail is a common noun because the first letter of a proper noun is capitalized.
Camel is a common noun.
it is re@lly @ common noun
common