No. "Angry" CANNOT be used as a noun. "Angry" is an adjective. "Anger" is the noun.
The adjective is "angry." An adjective is a word which describes a noun. There are two nouns in the sentence mentioned, "man" and "boys." The only word used to describe either noun was "angry," as the word "angry" describes the man.
' A mob'
Anger
The abstract noun form of the adjective 'contemptuous' is contemptuousness.The word 'contemptuous' is the adjective form of the abstract noun contempt.
its neither is actually a adjective
The noun form of the adjective 'angry' is angriness.The word 'angry' is the adjective form of the noun anger.
The root noun for "angry" is "anger."
Anger is the noun form of angry. anger
The adjective is "angry." An adjective is a word which describes a noun. There are two nouns in the sentence mentioned, "man" and "boys." The only word used to describe either noun was "angry," as the word "angry" describes the man.
The word 'angry' is the adjective form of the noun anger.
The noun form of the word "angry" is "anger."
' A mob'
Anger
The abstract noun form of the adjective 'contemptuous' is contemptuousness.The word 'contemptuous' is the adjective form of the abstract noun contempt.
An adjective -- it describes (modifies) a noun, such as a person. It's not something you make or do. Even if someone 'makes you angry,' make is the verb, angry is an adjective. Also: 'anger' is a noun, 'to anger' is a verb, and 'angrily' is an adverb.
Yes, the word 'temper' is both a verb and a noun.The noun 'temper' is a word for a state of mind seen in terms of being angry or calm; a word for the degree of hardness and elasticity of metal; a word for a thing.The noun form of the verb to temper is the gerund, tempering.Related noun forms are temperance, temperature and temperament.
A collective noun for a small group of angry people is a gang of thugs; a collective noun for a large group of angry people is a mob of people.