You may be thinking of relative pronouns, which are pronouns that relate, or refer to nouns.
Relative pronouns are pronouns that introduce a relative clause. A relative pronoun "relates" to the word that it modifies, providing additional information about the antecedent without starting another sentence.
The relative pronouns are: who, whom, whose, which, that.
Example: You will have to ask the teacher who assigned the work. (the pronoun 'who' introduces the relative clause 'who assigned the work')
Yes, the word 'relatives' is a noun, the plural form of the singular noun 'relative', a word for a person (people).
Yes. the plural noun 'relatives' is a concrete noun, a word for people connected by blood or marriage.
No, the term 'your relatives' is a noun phrase made up of the plural, common noun 'relatives' described by the possessive adjective 'your'.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing.Examples (proper nouns in bold):The Hamiltons are your relatives.Are your relatives are Canadians?We will pick up your relatives at the American Airlines' terminal.
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Neither is a collective noun; relatives is the plural form for the singular relative; representatives is the plural form for the singular representative. A collective noun for relatives is a gathering of relatives. A collective noun for representatives is a committee of representatives.
Yes, it is a common noun. It can also be an adjective.
Relatives is a noun. It's the plural form of relative.
There is no specified collective noun for a group of relatives. Collective nouns are an informal part of language. Any noun that suits the context can function as a collective noun; for example:a gathering of relativesa reunion of relativesa flock of relativesa gang of relativesa houseful of relativesa horde of relatives
The word search is a regular verb. Search can also be a noun as in (e.g.) the officers carried out a search on the office.
That is the correct spelling of the plural noun "relatives" (family).
You can use many different adjectives to modify the noun 'emotion'. Some examples: * a strong emotion * an intense emotion * a powerful emotion * a negative emotion * a useless emotion * a pleasant emotion To find more examples, do a Google search for "a * emotion" with the quotes.
Glowhanas noun Glowormys adjective