possessor.
The noun forms for the verb possess are possessor, possession, and the gerund, possessing.
No, the noun 'greed' is an abstract noun, a word for an excessive desire to possess more than one needs or deserves; a word for an emotion.
Yes, the noun 'hypocrisy' is an abstract noun, a word for a pretense of having virtues, beliefs, or principles that one does not actually possess; a word for a concept.
The noun forms of the verb to possess are possessor, possession, and the gerund, possessing.
The word 'possessive' is a noun and an adjective.The noun 'possessive' is a word for the case of nouns and pronouns expressing possession.The adjective 'possessive' is a word used to describe a noun as showing the desire to possess or control someone or something; used to describe a word as the grammatical tense expressing possession.
"Possess"is not a noun (a thing), it is a verb (something one does).
No, the word 'have' is a verb (have, has, having, had), meaning to possess, to own, to experience.A noun is a word for a person, a place, or a thing.A collective noun is a noun used to group people or things in a descriptive way.Examples:My mother made a pie. (the noun 'mother' is a word for a person, the noun 'pie' is a word for a thing)My mother made a batch of pies. (the noun 'batch' is a collective noun used to group a number of pies)We will have pie for dinner.
The word 'have' is both a noun (have, haves) and a verb (have, has, having, had).The noun 'have' is a word for someone with plenty of money or resources; most often used in the plural (the haves and have nots).The verb (or auxiliary verb) 'have' is to possess, hold, own, or to experience, undergo.
The word "into" is a preposition. It indicates movement or direction toward the inside or middle of something.
The root word of possessed is "possess."
The possessive form of the plural noun traditions is traditions'.Example: These traditions' origins are centuries old.
The word "has" is a verb. It is the present tense of have.