Yes, the word corps is a common, abstract, uncountable noun; a word for a part of an army that has particular responsibilities (the medical corps); a group of people who work together to do a particular job (the press corps); a word for a thing.
Chemical Corps was created in 1946.
The Marine Corps Reference Publication (MCRP) provides doctrinal guidance for Marine Corps operations and tactics. It serves as a resource for training, planning, and executing missions.
The noun 'whole' is a singular, common noun. The noun 'whole' is a concrete noun as a word for a thing in its complete form. The noun 'whole' is an abstract noun as a word for all of something.
The noun 'thing' is a singular, common noun. The noun 'thing' is a concrete noun as a word for a physical person, place, or object. The noun 'thing' is an abstract noun as a word for an idea, ability, or quality.
The fruit is a noun. The color can be a noun or an adjective.
Le corps (masculine noun) means 'the body'.
The word corp is not a word in English. With a period added, corp. is the abbreviation for corporation or corporal. With an 's' added to the end of the word, corps is a noun for a main subdivision of an armed force in the field, consisting of two or more divisions and a a group of people who work together to do a particular job, such as the press corps or diplomatic corps. The noun corps is both the singular and the plural.
A collective noun for journalists working in print, radio, and television is a "press corps" or "media corps."
"Private" can be both a noun and an adjective. As a noun, it refers to a soldier of the lowest rank in the army or marine corps.
The collective noun for cadets is a "corps." It's like a fancy way of saying a group of them. So next time you see a bunch of cadets marching around, you can call them a "corps" and sound all official and stuff.
Referring to the US Marine Corps, the plural noun (properly capitalized) is Marines.
Marine is an adjective (marine life) and a noun (a member of the Marine Corps).
"The civilian conservation corps met its goal of creating 2.5 million jobs."The pronoun 'its' (a possessive adjective) takes the place of the noun antecedent 'corps'.
Corps à corps was created in 2003.
USA freedom corps
Officially called Military Regions I, II, III, and IV; aka I Corps, II Corps, III Corps, and IV Corps. I Corps was near the DMZ, II Corps was the Highlands, III Corps Saigon AO (Area of Operations), and IV Corps was the Mekong Delta.
Collective nouns for giraffes are:a corps of giraffesa herd of giraffesa tower of giraffesa stretch of giraffesa troop of giraffesa totter of giraffes