The noun forms of the verb to celebrate are celebrator, celebration, and the gerund, celebrating.
Example sentences for the noun forms:
An overzealous celebrator was making a racket in the street.
We're planning a celebration for my parents thirtieth anniversary.
This is the kind of event that calls for celebrating.
Yes. Perfect. The noun is an understood you and it is a complete sentence.
Celebrate is a verb.
Bonfire is a noun so you would use it in a sentence as you would use a noun. A nounbeing a person, place, or THING."My mom wanted to make a huge bonfire in our yard to celebrate Christmas."
No, the word celebrate is a verb: celebrate, celebrates, celebrating, celebrated.The verb to celebrate is to observe in some way a person or thing with a ceremony, a party, an event, or a public acknowledgement.Example: We will celebrate our parents' anniversary with a party.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.Example: The party is to celebrate my parents' anniversary. They have been married for forty years. (the pronoun 'they' takes the place of the noun 'parents' in the second sentence)
The noun forms for the verb to celebrate are celebrator, celebration, celebrity, and the gerund, celebrating.
The word 'centennial' is both a noun and an adjective.The noun 'centennial' is a word for a one hundredth anniversary of something.A noun functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.Example sentences:The centennial of our town will be celebrated next year. (subject of the sentence)We have a budget set aside to celebrate the centennial. (direct object of the verb 'to celebrate')The adjective 'centennial' is used to describe a noun as of or relating to a hundredth anniversary.Example sentences:Grandpa had a centennial birthday.We've designed a new label for our products for our centennial year.
The abstract noun is celebration.
The noun forms of the verb to celebrate are celebrator, celebration, and the gerund, celebrating.The word 'celebratory' is the adjective form of the verb to celebrate.
No, doofus
No, 'celebrated' is an adjective.
The only concrete noun in your sentence is sentence. Note: The noun 'sentence' is a concrete noun only for a written or spoken sentence; the noun 'sentence' as a word for a penalty imposed for a crime conviction is an abstract noun.
It is a verb.