Yes, the word 'china' is a noun. The noun 'china' is a common noun when used for tableware, household objects and the ceramic material that these objects are made from. The noun 'China' is a proper noun when used as the name of the country.
The noun 'stamp' is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a small piece of paper that sticks on an envelope or a document to show that a fee or tax has been paid; a device used to imprint on paper or other object; an act of putting your foot down hard; a word for a thing. The noun forms of the verb to stamp are stamper and the gerund, stamping.
A noun used to describe another noun is called an attributive noun (or noun adjunct).Examples of nouns used to describe the noun diamond are:marquis diamondfair trade diamondbaseball diamondengagement diamond
No, it is an adjective.Although daily is normally used as an adjective, it can also be used as a noun. According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the noun daily means a newspaper published every day except Sunday; or (in Britain, now obsolescent) a domestic cleaner.When used as a noun it is a common noun.
No, firstly is an adverb.First, however, can be used as a noun or an adverb (or an adjective, for that matter), and can always be used in place of firstly.
The word 'hard' is an adjective (a hard floor, hard water) or an adverb (push hard, work hard), but not a noun.The noun form of the adjective 'hard' is hardness.
Hard is an adjective (tough, or difficult). The noun form is hardness, which is more often used as the opposite of softness.
Yes, pickaxe is a noun. It refers to a tool with a pointed and sharpened end, used for breaking up hard ground or rock.
The noun form of the adjective 'hard' is hardness.
The abstract noun for the adjective hard is hardness.
No the word hardworking is an adjective not a noun. A noun form is hardworker.
Yes, it is. Hardness is the noun. Hard can also be used as an adverb, because the form hardly has assumed an entirely different meaning.
A correct noun clause always has the subject before a verb. Noun clauses are used frequently with questions words making it hard for students to always make it right.
Yes, the word 'rock' is both a verb and a noun; examples: Verb: Don't rock the chair so hard that it hits the wall. Noun: I used a rock to hold the door open.
no,because hard is not because you cant do it
Diamond is a noun when referring to the hard form of carbon. It is an adjective when referring to something that has the shape of a diamond. It is a verb when used with an object, as in to adorn with diamonds
The noun 'boards' is the plural form of the singular noun board, a common, concrete noun; a word for a long, thin, flat piece of wood or other hard material used for the building or construction of things.