No, the noun 'Armistice Day' is a word for a single day. A collective noun is a noun used to group people or things in a descriptive way.
There is no standard collective noun for the noun 'days'. However, a collective noun is an informal part of language, any noun that suits the situation can function as a collective noun; for example, a series of days, an confusion of days, a glory of days, etc.
Collective nouns do not have an antecedent. A collective noun is a word used to group people or things taken together as one whole in a descriptive way.A collective noun can be singular or plural; for example:A herd of elephants frequents this water hole.Many herds of animals frequent this water hole.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.An antecedent is the noun that the pronoun replaces.An antecedent can be singular or plural. The noun that takes its place must agree in number (singular or plural) with the antecedent; for example:An antelope stood by the water. It raised its head to listen.Some antelopes stood by the water. Theyraised their heads to listen.
In this case, very is an adverb.
Like all other countries in the world, the first day of the week in France is Sunday. See the related question below._______________________________________________________In most cultures, Sunday is regarded as the first day of the week although many observe Monday as the first day of the week.According to the Bible, the Sabbath or Saturday is the last day of the week which marks Sunday as the first day of the week for many Jewish and Christian faiths,some regard Monday as the first day of the week as it is the first working day of the week.
Yes, the noun "week" is a common noun, a general word for any seven day period.
No, Tuesday is a noun or an adverb. As a noun: The first Tuesday of the month we do the inventory. As an adverb: We'll be meeting Tuesday afternoon.
No, Thursday is a proper noun, a day of the week. When we say "it rained Thursday" we are omitting the preposition "on."
No, the noun 'Armistice Day' is a word for a single day. A collective noun is a noun used to group people or things in a descriptive way.
No. Day is a noun, meaning daytime or a period of time. The adverb is daily.
There is no standard collective noun for the noun 'days'. However, a collective noun is an informal part of language, any noun that suits the situation can function as a collective noun; for example, a series of days, an confusion of days, a glory of days, etc.
No, although "on a perfect day" could be an adverb prepositional phrase. Perfect is an adjective and day is a noun.
No. The word Saturday is a proper noun, referring to a calendar day. When used with a noun, it means "on Saturday." *The plural form Saturdays may be considered an adverb when used with a verb meaning to happen or occur on Saturdays.
There is no standard collective noun for a group of 'days', however there are some related collective nouns:a twinkling of todaysa flight of yesterdaysa yearning of yesterdaysa promise of tomorrows
There is no collective noun in that sentence.A collective noun is a noun used to group people or things in a descriptive or a fanciful way.The standard collective nouns for trees are:a stand of treesa grove of treesan orchard of treesa forest of treesa copse of treesExample sentence: The grove of trees amazes crowds every day.
Yes, the word 'Saturday' is a noun, a word for a day of the week, a word for a thing.The noun 'Saturday' is a proper noun as the name of a specific day of the week.
The word 'today' functions as an adverb and a noun. Examples: Adverb: The auditor is expected today. Noun: Today is the day of the audit. No.