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No, the word 'bored' in that sentence is an adjective.

The adjective 'bored' is functioning as a predicate adjective (a type of subject complement), an adjective following a linking verb that renames or restates the subject (he = bored).

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9y ago

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What is the abstract noun for bored?

The word 'boring' is the present participle of the verb to bore; the act of making a deep hole with a drill like implement; or to make someone feel impatient or dissatisfied. The present participle is also an adjective (a boring tool, a boring lecture) and a gerund, a verbal noun (Boring is not a good recommendation for a novel.), an abstract noun form. The word 'bore' is a noun as well as a verb; a word for the measure inside a gun barrel, a concrete noun; and the trait of someone who talks too much about uninteresting subjects, or an uninteresting situation or activity; (He is a bore and his lectures are a bore.) both forms of abstract nouns. Another abstract noun form is boredom.