Yes, "obedience" is a noun. It refers to the act or quality of obeying or following instructions or commands.
"Lier" is not a standard English word. It could be a misspelling of "liar," which means someone who tells lies or falsehoods.
"El word" mentiroso in Spanish translates to "liar" in English. It refers to someone who tells lies or is not truthful.
The Dutch word for liar is "leugenaar." It is used to describe someone who tells false or misleading statements on purpose.
The Dutch word "saampjes" is an informal term that means "together" or "with someone." It is often used to refer to doing things in a group or with others.
Using a word that tells you someone is doing an acton
The word for this type of person is hypocrite. A hypocrite is someone who contradicts themselves by doing things they tell others they should not do.
"goes" as this the the word of action that tells us what someone is doing.
Yes, "obedience" is a noun. It refers to the act or quality of obeying or following instructions or commands.
The word 'bien' is an adverb in French. So it tells something about a verb, an adjective, or another adverb. In this case, what the adverb tells is how well someone or something is doing.
That could mean to contradict the other person or undermine what they are saying.
A boss
Action verbs express what the subject is doing. For example, Tim is running to the toy store.
hypocrite
hypocrit
tell the same someone to tell her 'hello how are u doing?' ;-)
Throughing something out for someone