Yes
The plural noun 'visitors' is a common noun, a general word for people who pay a call on someone or go to see something for a period of time.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing. A proper noun for the common noun 'visitors' are the names of the visitors.
There is no specific collective noun for the noun visitors, in which case any noun suitable for the situation can function as a collective noun; for example a couple of visitors, a crowd of visitors, a horde of visitors, etc.
"Visitors" is a common noun that refers to people who come to a place for a short time. It is a plural noun, indicating more than one visitor. Common nouns are general names for a person, place, or thing, as opposed to proper nouns, which name specific entities.
No, visitors is not a collective noun. The noun visitors is the plural form for the singular form visitor. A collective noun is a word used to group other nouns. Some collective nouns for visitors are a flock of visitors or a stream of visitors.
Visitors is a noun at plural.
Yes, visitors is the plural of the noun 'visitor', a word for a person.
The plural form of the noun visitor is visitors.
The possessive form of the plural noun visitors is visitors'.example: We have everything arranged for our visitors' comfort.
VIsitors is obviously not a an adjective. It is a noun in plural form.
No, "visitors" is not a pronoun. It is a noun that refers to people who come to a place for a short period of time. Pronouns are words that take the place of nouns in a sentence, such as he, she, it, they, etc.
No, "visitors entrance" does not have an apostrophe. It is used as a compound noun to describe an entrance designated for visitors. If you were indicating possession, such as an entrance belonging to visitors, you would use "visitors' entrance" with an apostrophe after "visitors."
Common noun