No. "Angry" CANNOT be used as a noun. "Angry" is an adjective. "Anger" is the noun.
The noun form of the adjective 'angry' is angriness.The word 'angry' is the adjective form of the noun anger.
Anger is the noun form of angry. anger
The word 'angry' is the adjective form of the noun anger.
The "glint in the milkman's eye" is a phrase that is used to describe a very early stage of something. It is used to describe something that is far away from being started.
'In the box' is a noun phrase; the noun is box.
No, a noun phrase is a noun or a group of words relating to a noun.The words, 'Mum has...' is a noun and a verb, a clause (a group of words with a subject and a verb that is an incomplete thought).The subject 'mum' is a noun phrase in itself, or:'My own mum...' is a noun phrase.'The other boy's mum...' is a noun phrase.'The mum with the gold crown...' is a noun phrase.
An appositive is a phrase, usually a noun phrase, that renames another phrase or noun. A noun phrase is a group of words taking the job of a noun in a sentence. Noun phrases consist of the main noun and any modifiers.
' A mob'
They are very different. The verb phrase shows an action or state and the noun phrase is about a person a place or thing. If you know the difference between a noun and a verb then that is it! verb phrase - was watching noun phrase - gold watch
The antecedent is the noun, the noun phrase, or the pronoun that a pronoun replaces.
what does phrase means A phrase is a string of words that on their own cannot stand as a complete sentence. A phrase is usually a prepositional phrase (introduced by a preposition); prepositional phrases in turn are usually also either adverbial or adjectival phrases because they modify a verb or a noun in the main clause. Example: "His mother was angry at him". "...at him" is a prepositional phrase, introduced by the preposition "at". In this case it is also an adverbial phrase, because it modifies the verb "was angry". The prepositional phrase contains no verb, which is why it is a phrase instead of a clause. Example: "He lost his backpack with all of his schoolwork." "...with all of his schoolwork" is an prepositional phrase, introduced by the preposition "with". But in this case it is an *adjectival* phrase because it modifies the noun "backpack", instead of modifying a verb. Compare to this: "His mother was angry at him so he ran to his room." "...he ran to his room" is a clause, not a phrase, because by itself it is a complete sentence (it has a subject and a verb and can stand alone by itself as a sentence). In this case it is joined to the main clause by the coordinating conjunction "so".