If you are referring to a dry, possibly hard, thin baked cake it is a noun. It can be an adjective as in 'having a biscuit colour'
Yes.
Yes it is
The noun 'biscuit' is a common noun, a general word for a variety of baked, flour-based food products; a general word for a light brown color.The noun 'biscuit' is not a material noun. A material noun is a word for a thing used to make other things, for example, flour, shortening, salt, etc. (all common nouns).
There is no adjective for the noun biscuit. The noun is often used as a noun adjunct (e.g. biscuit dough).
A biscuit is known as a 'cookie' in the United States
as in a noun, it could also be crevice
Common
The noun 'biscuit' is a common noun, a general word for a variety of baked, flour-based food products; a general word for a light brown color.The noun 'biscuit' is not a material noun. A material noun is a word for a thing used to make other things, for example, flour, shortening, salt, etc. (all common nouns).
There is no adjective for the noun biscuit. The noun is often used as a noun adjunct (e.g. biscuit dough).
The noun 'biscuits' is a plural, common, concrete noun; a word for things. The singular form of the noun is 'biscuit', a word for a thing.
A biscuit is known as a 'cookie' in the United States
No. Depending on the context, it is a verb or adjective. For example, in "I nibbled on a biscuit", "nibbled" is a verb. Whereas "the nibbled biscuit" makes "nibbled" an adjective on the state of the biscuit. A noun is " a person, a place or a thing". Nibbled doesn't really fit into any of these categories.
Yes, the word 'biscuit' is a noun; a word for a small light bread made with baking powder or baking soda; a word for a cookie; a word for a light beige color; a word for a thing.
as in a noun, it could also be crevice
common noun
no
Common
Common noun
common