Yes, membership is a noun, a singular, common, abstract noun.
The abstract noun for the noun 'member' is membership.
The abstract noun for the noun 'member' is membership.
The abstract noun for the noun 'member' is membership.
The collective noun 'congregation' is a word for a group of people attending a religious service or the membership of a church or parish.
Belong is a verb. The noun form is belonging. Examples: Verb: I belong to the union. My boss does not belong to the union. Noun: Those are your belongings. This is my belonging.
No, it is not. It is a transitive verb (to begin, to start up) or a noun (a person beginning instruction or membership). The participles of the verb, initiated and initiating, could both be adjectives.
Yes, total is a noun; total is also a verb and an adjective. Example uses:As a noun: The total for your order is $12.As a verb: Ask the waiter to total our check because we must go.As an adjective: The club's total membership is over one hundred.
No. Lifetime is a noun (entire life, or hyperbolically "a long time"). It is also used as an adjective (lifetime guarantee, lfetime membership). There is no adverb form.
The collective noun for worshipers is a congregation of worshipers.
The abstract noun for the verb to expel is expellable.
it is a membership for tootown. and you can do membership stuff
There are no membership codes to get free membership. You either have to pay, or make do without membership.