Yes, the word 'laundry' is a noun, a common, concrete noun; an uncountable noun for clothes and linens that need to be washed or that have been washed; a countable noun for a place where laundering is done.
Speed your laundry drying time with- Wind Higher temperature Lower humidity Spacing out the laundry Placing the laundry to give the max surface area for evapouration to take place
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You may have a small hot water heater in your house or apartment, this will use up all the hot water in doing laundry so the tank needs to fill up and heat again.
When used as a noun, "time" is an abstract noun. It is most of the time a common noun.
"thermal energy" is a compound noun
Examples of collective nouns for clothes are:a rack of clothesbundle of clothesa closet of clothesa basket of clothesa collection of clothes
The noun laundry as a word for a business is singular. The plural form is laundries.The noun laundry as a word for clothes to be washed is an uncountable noun, and has no plural.
The noun laundry as a word for a business is singular. The plural form is laundries.The noun laundry as a word for clothes to be washed is an uncountable noun, and has no plural.
Laundry does not have a past tense because it is a noun.
The plural of laundry is laundries.But only for the plural of laundry as a business or service (e.g. coin laundries).Laundry (clothes to be washed) is an uncountable noun.
There is no standard collective noun for 'washing' (laundry), in which case a noun that suits the context can function as a collective noun, for example, a basket of washing, a pile of washing, a line of washing, etc.
Yes, but only for the plural of laundry as a business or service (e.g. coin laundries). Laundry (clothes to be washed) is an uncountable noun.
This could be the noun "laundry" (dirty clothes, or cleaners). The proper noun (surname, given name) would usually be Landry.
Yes, the noun 'pile' is a collective noun, it can be used as a general collective noun and is often used for a pile of trash, a pile of laundry, a pile of newspapers, etc.
The word "cleaner" (noun, adjective) is both British and US English. The noun "cleaner" (cleaners) has the US synonym "laundry."
The word 'does' is both a noun and a verb.The noun 'does' is the plural form for the singular noun doe, a female deer.The verb 'does' is the third person, singular, present of the verb to 'do' (does, doing, did). Example: She does her laundry on Mondays.
"Laundry" is typically a noun, referring to the dirty clothes and linens that need to be washed or are in the process of being washed. For example, you might say, "I need to do the laundry," where "laundry" is a noun representing the clothes that need to be washed. However, there is a related verb form, "to launder," which means to wash, dry, and iron clothes and linens. For instance, you could say, "I need to launder my clothes," where "launder" is the verb form associated with the action of washing and preparing clothes.