Yes, "assignment" is a common noun. It is a general term used to refer to a task or piece of work that has been assigned to someone.
To make the word "assignment" possessive, you can add an apostrophe followed by the letter "s" after the word, like this: assignment's. This shows that something belongs to the assignment.
The plural possessive form is students' assignment.The apostrophe after the ending -s shows that something belongs to the students, in this case, their assignment.
"Microphone" is a common noun.
"Whales" is a common noun.
The common noun for the proper noun "Linda" is "woman" or "person."
The noun 'assignment' is a singular, common, abstract noun; a word for a task or work that has been designated to someone; the act of giving the ownership of or rights to property to someone; a word for a concept, a word for a thing.
Yes, the noun 'incomplete' is a common noun, a general word for a grade given when the requirements for an academic course or assignment have not been met.The noun form of the adjective 'incomplete' is incompleteness, also a common noun.
Yes
The word lesson is a noun, a common, singular, abstract noun; a word for an assignment or exercise in which something is to be learned; a period of instruction; a class; a word for a thing. Example sentence:Class, the lesson today is nouns.
No. It is not an adverb. Assignment is a noun form of the verb assign and there is no direct adverb form.
No, using 'he' as a common gender noun is not only inappropriate, it is poor grammar. If the gender is unknown, some appropriate ways to overcome the problem is: When the teacher gave you the assignment, what did he or she say? When the teacher gave you the assignment, what did the teacher say? When the teacher gave you the assignment, what did they say?
Common
Common noun
To make the word "assignment" possessive, you can add an apostrophe followed by the letter "s" after the word, like this: assignment's. This shows that something belongs to the assignment.
common
Pea is a common noun, and peas is the plural...still a common noun.
A common noun.