Yes, wheat bread is a common noun; a singular, common, concrete, open compound noun.
The noun bread is a common, concrete noun, a word for a thing.The noun bread is a mass (uncountable) noun, a word for a substance; for example: We can have some bread with dinner.The plural form, breads is a word for 'types of' or 'kinds of' bread; for example: The breads we have are rye and Italian.
Yes, wheat bread is a common noun; a singular, common, concrete, open compound noun.
The word 'bakes' is not a noun; the word 'bakes' is the present tense for the verb 'to bake' (bakes, baking, baked). The noun form 'bake', as in clam bake, is a common noun. Noun forms for the verb 'to bake' are 'baker', one who bakes, a common noun; and the verbal noun (gerund), 'baking', also a common noun.
Some collective nouns for loaves are a batch of loaves or a stack of loaves. Other collective nouns for loaves would be a word suitable for the context of the loaves; for example a basket of loaves, a shelf of loaves, a case of loaves, etc.
The noun 'toaster' is a singular, common, concrete noun, a word for a device for browning slices of bread; a word for a thing.
The word 'loafs' is not a noun. The word 'loafs' is the third person, singular, present of the verb to loaf (to spend time idly).Example: After finishing a chore, dad loafs on the patio sipping a beer.The noun 'loaf' is a singular common noun. The plural common noun is loaves.Example: While dad loafs on the patio, mom is baking two loaves of bread in the oven.
The noun 'toaster' is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a type of appliance; a word for a thing.
The pronouns that takes the place of the noun 'bread' are it, its, itself.The noun 'bread' is an uncountable noun, a word for a substance, so there is not plural pronoun for the noun 'bread'.
The word banana is a noun, a common noun. When used as an adjective, as in banana bread, it is not capitalized. Any common noun can become a proper noun if it is used for the name of someone or something, such as the movie 'Bananas' (1971) or Banana Republic brand.
Since bread is a "thing", it is a noun.
Yes, the noun 'crust' is a common noun, a general word for:the outer surface of bread hardened by baking;the pastry cover of a pie;a hard surface layer of something;the outer layer of the Earth.