The word 'robe' is a common noun, a singular, concrete noun.
A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing; for example:
The words 'red' and 'white' are adjectives that describe the noun 'robe'.
'une robe' is the French noun for 'a dress'
Robe
(Elle) porte une robe - (she) is wearing a dress
what color is the robe
I use before my swimsuit is a robe but my swimsuit is in the robe you'll just hide your swimsuit in your robe thank you for giving that good question i am angela gonzales i have facebook please add me thank you....
No, the noun 'vestment' is a common noun, a general word for a ceremonial robe or garment worn for official purposes. A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing.
La robe (the dress) is a feminine noun in French.
'une robe' is the French noun for 'a dress'
Since robe is a noun, not a verb, there is no past plural, although the plural of the word robe is robes.
regalia
A red dress is 'une robe rouge' in French. Robe is a feminine noun.
First, I believe you are asking about "spotted"-- you need two T's in that word or the O sound will be long (as in note); you want a short O sound (as in not). The phrase spotted robe has an adjective and a noun. An adjective describes-- tells us something about-- a noun. In this case, it tells us what kind of robe. The word "robe" is a noun because it is a thing. (A noun is a person-- teacher, Moses, astronaut; a place-- Boston, Russia, England; or a thing-- book, house, train.) So, spotted is the adjective. The word it is describing is the noun "robe."
Roman Catholic AnswerHis house robe, or street wear is called a soutane, or a cassock. The white robe that he wears over that for the Sacraments is called an Alb.
regalia
The singular noun possessive form of "robes" is "robe's."
The cast of Under the White Robe - 1923 includes: Neely Edwards as Nervy Ned
robe blanche