Noun, subject of the sentence: His play saved the game.
Noun, object of the sentence: I saw a great play last night.
it could be used as an adjective or a noun,according to how you use it.
Describing a noun, e.g. a Shakespearean play
Yes, the word 'loaves' is a collective noun for loaves of bread.
You can't use adjectives as nouns; a noun is a word for a person place or thing, and adjectives are used to describe nouns. There is one word that is both a noun and an adjective that you could use for the noun chair: It is an antique or it is an antique chair.
The noun 'save' is a sports term, a singular, common, abstract noun; a word for a play that prevents an opponent from scoring or winning.
The common noun for the adjective heavy is heaviness.There is one use of the word heavy as a noun; heavy (a common noun) is the word for the role of villain in a movie or play. Example: With his rough appearance, Mike is always cast as the heavy.
The noun 'use' is a singular, common, abstract noun; a word for the purpose or utility of something; a word for a concept.
how can you use the word content in noun and verb in a sentence
No, the word sharpness is a common, abstract, uncountable noun, a word for the quality of a thing.I can't think of a use for the noun sharpness in the possessive form; I don't know what the quality of sharpness could posses. If there is a use for the possessive form, that would be: sharpness's.
"Required" could be a verb or an adjective. For instance, to use it as a verb, you could say, "You required him to clean his room." To use it as an adjective, you could say, "This is a required test."
The word 'is' can't be used as a noun. Some words are both a verb and a noun but 'is' is not.
The speaker's tone was condescending, and the crowd reacted with belligerence. The word belligerence is a noun. You could also use the word aggressiveness.