Yes, the word 'football' is a noun; a word for a sport, a game, a ball; a word for a thing.
The noun 'football' is a common noun, a general word for a type of competitive sport or the ball used to play the sport.
The noun 'football' is a concrete noun as a word for the ball used to play the game; a word for a physical object.
The noun football is an abstract noun as a word for the game or the sport, a word for the sum total of rules, teams, space, and equipment used to play the game; a word for a concept.
The noun 'football' is a singular, countable noun as a word for the ball used to play the game. The plural noun is 'footballs'.
The noun 'football' is an uncountable noun as a word for the game or sport; a type of aggregate noun, a word representing an indefinite number of elements or parts.
The noun 'football' is a common, compound noun. The noun 'football' is a concrete, singular noun as a word for a type of ball. The noun 'football' is an abstract, uncountable noun as a word for a game and a type of sport.
The noun 'football' is a singular, countable noun as a word for the ball used to play the game. The plural noun is 'footballs'.The noun 'football' is an uncountable noun as a word for the game or sport; a type of aggregate noun, a word representing an indefinite number of elements or parts.
No, the noun 'football' is a common noun, a general word for a type of competitive sport or the ball used to play the sport.The common noun 'football' is capitalized only when it is the first word in a sentence.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing; for example the Football Association of Ireland or the Boston Rugby Football Club.
Proper nouns are specific names or nouns. So actually player is just a noun/subject and football describes what type of player it is so football in the sentence is actually an adjective.
The word 'Pittsburgh Steelers' is a compound proper noun; the name of a specific football team.
The noun 'football', the game, is a non-count noun. The noun 'football', the ball, is a singular noun; the plural form is footballs.
The noun 'footballer' is a common noun, a general word for someone who plays soccer; a word for any footballer anywhere.A proper noun is the name or title of a specific person, place, or thing.
Football (the sport and the ball) is a noun.
Yes, the compound noun 'football practice' is a common noun, a general word for any instance of training a football team.
No. Football is a noun.
Examples of Adjective Noun patterns are: The football team is good. (Football is the Adjective in this sentence, but, it can also be a Noun.) <--- Example: The football was sticky. (Football is now a Noun in this sentence.) The green eyes scared me! (Green is the Adjective in this sentence, but, it can also be a Noun.) <--- Example: Green is my favorite color. (Green is now the Noun in this sentence.)
The pronouns that takes the place of the plural noun footballs are they as a subject, and them as an object. Examples:The footballs in the bin are new. They were purchased over the summer so we would have them for the opening of the season.Note: The word football as the noun for the game of football is an uncountable noun. The pronoun that takes the place of this use of the noun is it: When does football start, it is my favorite game.