No, the noun 'Elvis Presley' is an example of a concrete noun; a word for a person; the name of a real person.
Nouns are not describing words. Adjectives are the words that describe nouns; Elvis Presley is a noun, a proper noun, the name of a person.Some adjectives to describe Elvis Presley are:famousflawedSome nouns that are synonyms for Elvis Presley are:performersinger
An example of an abstract noun is knowledge.
Yes, 'example' is an abstract noun; a word for a concept, not a physical thing.
The noun example is a singular, common, abstract noun.
No, the word Elvis is a noun, a proper noun, the name of a person.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence. The pronoun for the noun Elvis (assuming that Elvis is a male) is he as a subject and him as an object. Examples:Elvis is my oldest brother. He is home from college. I hope you will have a chance to meet him.
A sausage is not a abstract noun because an abstract noun is something you cannot see but feel for example anger, happiness, which makes a sausage a concrete noun.
The word 'know' can be an abstract noun for example, in the expression 'in the know' or the compound noun 'know how'.The abstract noun form for the verb 'to know' is the gerund knowing.A related abstract noun form is knowledge.
There is no abstract noun form of the concrete noun 'street'. The concrete noun 'street' can be used in an abstract context, for example: He lives on a street of broken dreams.
Yes, the noun 'kind' is an abstract noun as a word for a word for a group united by common traits.
Example sentence for the abstract noun 'courage':I do not have the courage to tell lies.
The noun 'four' is a concrete noun as a word for a physical count of something (for example: The apples look good. I'll take four.)The noun 'four' is an abstract noun as a word for a count of something abstract (for example: We finished the project on day four.)
The word example is a noun, a singular, common, abstract noun.