Yes, a number is a noun, a singular, common noun; a number is a thing. Examples:
When a number is used to describe a noun, it is an adjective:
No, "s" is not a prefix. It is not added to the beginning of words to change their number or part of speech. It can, however, be considered a suffix, in that it changes many singular nouns to plural nouns.
The three words are nouns; the three words contain a double letter.
I believe this question is missing a list of words, as there are more than three words that are not nouns (as there are over 20, not including pronouns, in this sentence alone).However, just for fun, here are three words that are not nouns that begin with the letter w:WigglyWhiffedWeird
There are a great number of words that are considered academic A few of these words are often medical words.
The nouns 'truth', 'beauty', and 'charm' are all abstract nouns, words for concepts. The nouns 'truth', 'beauty', and 'charm' are all considered positive words.
The three words are abstract nouns.
They are considered common nouns because they do not name a specific noun, such as "Sally," or "Africa."
Three types of words are verbs, nouns, and adjectives, but there are others.
Nouns for singular and plural that are the same form: deer swine cattle moose offspring advice Nouns that are a shortened form for 'a pair of': pants reins glasses scissors tweezers pajamas Aggregate nouns, words for a group of a number of things: accommodations communications contents thanks headquarters police
The two nouns in your sentence are words and nouns, they are plural, common nouns.
Numbers are nouns and adjectives. Examples: Noun: Three is more than two. Adjective: The baby is three months old.
"Adjetivos" is the Spanish word for "adjectives," which are words that describe or modify nouns. In Spanish, adjectives agree in gender and number with the nouns they describe.