Yes, assumption is a noun, a singular, common, abstract noun.
Yes, "assumption" is a noun. It is a belief or statement that is accepted as true without proof.
Well, assume is a verb. The noun form is assumption and the plural of that is assumptions.
"Assumption" is the noun that defines something this is assumed, whether it be another noun, or a date, color, verb, or simply a fact. usage: [When Bill referred to "The Road Not Taken" to his college class without explanation, he was under the ASSUMPTION that all his students were familiar with the author Robert Frost.] [He also made the assumption ... by assuming.] In the movie [Van Wilder], when the main character makes up his literature class to graduate, he requests extra paper to answer his challenge of what "way leads on to way" meant - and it is from "The Road Not Taken". It's a short poem, perhaps less than 200 words, well worth reading (especially if you plan to attend college).
The stressed syllable in the word "assumption" is the second syllable: "sump."
No. If you are asking "how many", there is the implied assumption that the answer will be more than one (dog). So you would use the plural form of the noun dog, "dogs", which, in this case, takes the linking verb "are"
A sentence with assumption would involve making a statement based on a belief or supposition without concrete evidence or confirmation. For example, "Assuming it will rain tomorrow, I will bring an umbrella with me."
Assumptions is a noun (plural form of assumption).
The noun forms for the verb to assume are assumability, assumer, and the gerund assuming. Another noun form is assumption.
A noun form of the verb to assume is assumption.
A derivative noun is a verb that becomes a noun by adding a suffix to the verb. Examples are: accept - acceptance apply - application assume - assumption decide - decision inform - information state - statement
The verb "assume" in noun form would be "assumption." An assumption is something that people accept as a truth or a certainty of occurence, despite no presence of proof. Another definition of the word assumption is to take on a role or responsibility.
Yes, posit is a noun as well as a verb. The noun is a word for a fact, an idea, an assumption. The verb means to assume or put forward as fact or the factual basis for an argument; to postulate.
Well, assume is a verb. The noun form is assumption and the plural of that is assumptions.
It'll take a lot of gumption to espouse that assumption. That's your assumption. That is not an assumption.
noun noun: hypothesis; plural noun: hypothesesa supposition or proposed explanation made on the basis of limited evidence as a starting point for further investigation. "professional astronomers attacked him for popularizing an unconfirmed hypothesis"synonyms: theory, theorem, thesis, conjecture, supposition, postulation, postulate, proposition, premise, assumption; More notion, concept, idea, possibility "his "steady state" hypothesis of the origin of the universe"Philosophy a proposition made as a basis for reasoning, without any assumption of its truth.
"Assumption" is the noun that defines something this is assumed, whether it be another noun, or a date, color, verb, or simply a fact. usage: [When Bill referred to "The Road Not Taken" to his college class without explanation, he was under the ASSUMPTION that all his students were familiar with the author Robert Frost.] [He also made the assumption ... by assuming.] In the movie [Van Wilder], when the main character makes up his literature class to graduate, he requests extra paper to answer his challenge of what "way leads on to way" meant - and it is from "The Road Not Taken". It's a short poem, perhaps less than 200 words, well worth reading (especially if you plan to attend college).
I do not support your assumption. Your assumption is based upon few facts.
I think assumption of older people is cultural assumption What do you think