In this case you add a suffix "ment" to make the noun "a payment".
$250.80
agree to do jury duty if selected-- Apex
b) $624.00
a buck an ear
Team sports
The word 'pay' is an abstract noun as a word for wages, salary, recompense, or reward. The abstract noun forms for the verb to pay are payer, payee, payment, and the gerund, paying.
The abstract noun form of the verb 'bankrupt' is bankruptcy.The noun 'bankrupt' is an concrete noun as a word for a person who has officially admitted that they have no money and cannot pay what they owe, or judged insolvent by a court.
The word pay is both a verb (pay, pays, paying, paid) and a noun (uncountable).The noun 'pay' is a word for money received for doing work; a word for a thing.You can "pay" someone (verb). Or you can receive "pay" (noun).The noun forms of the verb to pay are payee, payer, payment, and the gerund, paying.
The word 'treat' is an abstract noun, a word for a source of special pleasure or delight; an occasion when you pay for something for someone else; a word for a concept.The abstract noun forms of the verb to treat are treatment and the gerund, treating.
The word 'pay' functions as a verb and a noun.verb - I will pay the tax tomorrow.noun - She collects her pay on Mondays
The word 'pay' functions as a verb and a noun.verb - I will pay the tax tomorrow.noun - She collects her pay on Mondays
No. Pay can be a verb (to spend money) or a noun (your wages), or noun adjunct (pay desk, pay increase), or possibly an adjective (pay toilet).
Compliment can be a noun and a verb. Noun: An expression of praise. Verb: To pay a compliment to someone.
The present participle of the verb 'to bore' is the gerund (verbal noun) boring, an abstract noun; a word for something uninteresting, or doing something uninteresting. It can also mean drilling holes, an activity noun that is observable but not concrete.Example sentences:Moviegoers love the exciting, and will not pay to see the boring.Boring an audience is not what a speaker should do.His job consisted of boring holes in new doors.Boring is also an adjective; a boring movie, a boring lecture, a boring tool, etc.
Yes, the noun 'pay' is a common noun, a general word for money received for doing work.The word 'pay' is also a verb and an adjective.
The word required is the past participle, past tense of the verb to require; the past participle of the verb is also an adjective.Examples:You are required to pay at the time of service. (verb)I have the required credits to take this course. (adjective)
Paying is both the present participle of the verb 'to pay', as well as a gerund (a verb being treated as a noun).As a verb: I am paying for the movie tickets with a credit card.As a gerund: This restaurant's policy is paying before eating.