The noun crackle can mean:
1) a sound, made in any number of ways, ranging from a crunching noise to an electrical discharge.
It can also mean:
2) an intentional cracking or crazing in the surface of pottery
The third meaning of the verb 'crackle' is not typically a noun, metaphorically referring to the discharge of energy:
3) a sense of energetic enthusiasm (e.g. the crackle of their enthusiastic activity).
It is a verb.
form_title=Crackle Paint form_header=Make your home snap, crackle, pop with crackle paint! What is your budget for the crackle paint technique?=_ |How many rooms do you want the technique used in?= {(),1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15} What colors are you interested in?=_ What are the sizes of the rooms?=_
The word period has 1 part of speech,a noun,but the word has 3 different meanings as a noun.
no
There is none. Flue is a noun with many different meanings. However, none of them have an opposite.
Bug is not an adverb. It is a noun (with several meanings) and a verb (with a few meanings).
No. Bolt is a noun or a verb, both with several meanings. But it does not modify a noun.
For an accurate translation, use it in a sentence. There are too many meanings to translate it otherwise. Is it a verb, a noun?
Any you like! here's some suggestions: Pink nail polish with black crackle Blue nail polish with black crackle Black nail polish with pink crackle Pink nail polish with white crackle Grey nail polish with blue crackle Black nail polish with white crackle Red with green crackle for Christmas Orange with black crackle for Halloween Yellow with blue crackle for summer.
Yes, it is a plural noun, with several meanings. It can mean three identical babies.
You can't just use the crackle nail polish because there has to be another polish under it. its like crackle paint for walls, the chemicals react with the normal nail polish in order to make the crackle effect.
No, it is a verb, or a noun. It has separate meanings (e.g. to dash, to ooze, to tear), and a run has several meanings as a noun.