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french fries
French fries.
The word 'fries' is the plural form of the noun 'fry' and the third person, singular, present form of the verb to fry.Examples:My dad always fries some onion with his eggs. (verb)The French fries are included with that meal. (noun)
The term African American is a compound, proper noun, a word for a specific group of people. The plural noun, intellectuals is a common noun. The proper noun African American is a 'noun used as an adjective' to describe the common noun intellectuals. Using a proper adjective or a proper noun to describe a common noun does not change the common noun into a proper noun; for example McDonald's fries, the noun fries is still a common noun; or for Shakespearean character, the noun character is still a common noun.
potato chips, fries, pickels, common salt,pretzels, french fries ect...........
The common noun for "French" is "language" or "person."
french fries
French fries french fries french fries
French fries!
The word fries is a noun and a verb. The noun form relates to french fries. The verb form is the third person singular present tense of the verb fry.
France is the country, french is the language France is a noun. French is an adjective in most useage. "I like French fries".
French can be both a proper noun and a common noun. When referring to the French language or people, it is a proper noun, like when saying "He speaks French" or "She is French." However, when used as an adjective or to describe something related to France, it is a common noun, such as in "I love French food" or "We saw a French movie."