The word 'author' is a noun, a word for a person.
The word 'purpose' is a noun, a word for an idea.
The possessive form of the noun phrase 'the purpose of the author' is 'the author's purpose'.
The noun author's is a possessive noun form.
The noun author used in this context is a possessive noun and should have an apostrophe 's' at the end of the word. The correct term is author's perspective, an open spaced compound noun; a singular, common, abstract noun.
Yes, "author's purpose" is a noun. It refers to the reason an author has for writing a piece of text, such as to inform, persuade, entertain, or explain a concept.
The part of speech for "authors" is a noun, while "purpose" is a noun as well. Together, "authors purpose" is a noun phrase used to refer to an author's intent or reason for writing a piece of work.
There is no standard collective noun for the noun authors, in which case a noun that suits the situation can be used, for example, a symposium of authors, a staff of authors, a mob of authors.
the authors purpose is the entertain i think
The noun 'authors' is a noun, the plural form of the singular noun 'author', a word for a personThe word 'authors' is also the third person, singular, present of the verb to author.
what was authors purpose for writing the book oliver twis
he grows way too fast and has a learning disability.
The authors purpose was that Diana and Georgie could find peace with Mrs.Lilian.
Famous is an adjective; authors is a plural noun.
Did I ask??????
Yes the word purpose is a noun. It is a common noun.
There are no "authors" when it comes to Bart Simpson. The writers give Bart purpose in whatever the episode's plot is about.
No, authors do not usually state a purpose, but they always have one for writing, even if they can't even think of what it is!