How do you use chicken as a noun?

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1131355

2026-02-17 20:50

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The noun 'chicken' is a singular noun as a Word for a type of bird. The plural noun is 'chickens'.

The noun 'chicken' is an uncountable noun as a Word for the meat of this type of bird, a Word for a substance.

The noun 'chicken' is a common gender noun, a Word for a male or a female bird.

  • The gender specific noun for a male chicken is 'rooster'.
  • The gender specific noun for a female chicken is 'hen'.

A noun functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the (direct or indirect) object of a verb or the object of a preposition.

Example uses:

  • Four chickens will be needed for the barbecue. (subject of the sentence, plural-countable)
  • I found an egg in the nest that a chicken had laid. (subject of the relative clause, singular-countable)
  • We made enough chicken for everyone. (direct object of the verb 'made', uncountable)
  • They made the chickens a shelter. (indirect object of the verb 'made', plural-countable)
  • We made the soup with leftover chicken. (object of the preposition 'with', uncountable)

Note: The noun 'chicken' is also an informal Word for a contest between people in which the first person to lose nerve and withdraw from a daring or dangerous situation or activity is the loser.

The Word 'chicken' is an informal adjective used to describe a person as timid or cowardly.

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