No - garden is singular, gardens is plural.
Yes the word garden is a common noun. The plural would be gardens.
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.
Yes, the word 'garden' is used as a collective noun for a garden of florists.
No. In this case vegetable is an adjective describing the type of garden. Garden is just a regular noun.
The word 'gardening' is a noun form, a gerund, the present participle of the verb to garden that functions as a noun.The noun forms of the verb to garden are gardener and the gerund, gardening.The word 'garden' is a noun as a word for a piece of ground used for growing flowers, fruit, or vegetables; a word for a thing.
Yes, the word arboretum is a noun, a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for abotanical garden devoted to trees, a word for a thing.
The word fuchsia is a noun. It is a garden plant.
Unless it is the name of a specific garden, and so a proper noun, or it is the first word in the sentence, then it would not be in capitals.
No, the word "garden" is not a proper noun; it is a common noun. Proper nouns refer to specific names of people, places, or organizations, like "Central Park" or "Sarah." In contrast, "garden" refers to a general place where plants are cultivated and does not specify a unique entity.
No, the word 'such' is not a noun; the word 'such' is an adjective, an adverb, and an indefinite pronoun.Examples:adjective: We had such fun at the beach.adverb: Her garden has such beautiful flowers.indefinite pronoun: The served tea, cakes, cookies, and such.
In this sentence, garden is an adjective describing the word tools.
A city in a garden is the English equivalent of Chicago's motto 'urbs in horto'. In the word by word translation, the noun 'urbs' means 'city'. The preposition 'in' means 'in'. The noun 'horto' means 'garden'.