Yes, garden centre is a noun.
The Garden Centre Group was created in 1960.
noun
No. In this case vegetable is an adjective describing the type of garden. Garden is just a regular noun.
Yes, the word 'garden' is used as a collective noun for a garden of florists.
The noun 'garden' is a countable noun, a noun with a singular and a plural form.Examples:My neighbor has a pretty garden. (singular)Let's walk through the park to see all the gardens. (plural)
No. In this case vegetable is an adjective describing the type of garden. Garden is just a regular noun.
No it is a place - a noun or "to centre" is a verb
Yes, "centre" is a common noun when it refers to a central point or location in a general sense, such as in "the centre of the park." However, it can also be part of a proper noun when used in specific names, like "Centre for Disease Control." In general usage, though, it is a common noun.
Yes the word garden is a common noun. The plural would be gardens.
Garden is the only common noun in the sentence. Angie is a proper noun; you is a pronoun.
No, the word gardener is a noun; a word for someone who keeps a garden; a word for a person.The word 'garden' is the adjective form, as well as a verb and a noun.
Whether a word is a noun or a verb depends on its function in the sentence. Centre is a noun in the following sentence: People thought that the Earth was the centre of the universe. Centre is a verb in the next sentence: "All these theories centre on two battles in Estonia" (quoted from Wikipedia)