Verb = touch
Noun = bag
No, bag is a noun (a bag) and a verb (to bag).
The word "bag" is itself a noun, in addition to a verb (bag, bags, bagging, bagged).
It depends on the sentence. If you say, "I put my groceries in a bag," , that would be a noun. But if you say, "I bag my groceries," , that is a verb.
The word bag is a singular, common, concrete noun. The word bag is also a verb (bag, bags, bagging, bagged).
Yes, the word 'bags' is both a noun (bag, bags) and a verb (bag, bags, bagging, bagged).Examples:We have two bags to check and one carry-on. (noun)Everyone bags groceries when it gets busy. (verb)
The word 'bag' is a noun form as a word for a container made of paper, plastic, leather, or cloth, used for carrying or storing things.example: I bought a beautiful leather bag without a designer name.The noun forms of the verb to bag are bagger and the gerund, bagging.Related noun forms are baggage and a noun used by food storage bag manufacturers, baggie.
The word 'sack' is a noun as a word for a large strong bag of a coarsely woven material, a similar container of paper or plastic.The verb 'to sack' is to plunder a captured place or to place in a sack.The noun forms of the verb to sack are sacker and the gerund, sacking.
In the noun phrase, 'a bag of bags', the noun bag is functioning as the collective noun for a group of bags.
As a noun, purse or pouch. As a verb, catch, snare, shoot.
No, that's actually a adjective, because it describes a noun. I was grateful for that gift bag.
Yes, the noun 'bag' is a common noun, a general word for any container made of flexible material with an opening at the top used for carrying things; a word for any bag of any kind.The word 'bag' is also a verb: bag, bags, bagging, bagged.
The word 'bag' is a noun as a word for a container made of flexible material (paper, plastic, fabric, leather) used to carry something; a word for a loose fold of fabric or skin; a word for a thing.The noun forms of the verb 'to bag' are bagger, baggage, and the gerund, bagging.