It can be, as one of two homonyms:
Attendant (accompanying, consequent) is an adjective, as in attendant risks.
Attendant (a person ) is a noun, as in a gas station attendant.
No, it is a verb form. It is the third person singular, present tense conjugation of the verb to attend.
No. Attendance is an abstract noun.
The adjective is "present" which means already in attendance.
The correct spelling of the noun is absence (state of non-attendance). The adjective is absent.
The prefix for attendance is "at-" or "at-" as in the word "attendance."
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Attendance - Asistencia
A homophone for "attendance" is "attendance." Homophones are words that sound the same but have different meanings and spellings.
Average number of attendance
Attendance refers to the people that "attended" a function. If you attended then you were in attendance. You were among the people that were there.
Massachusetts became the first state to pass compulsory school attendance laws, and by 1918, all states required children to receive an education.
At a company fish fry, ½ in attendance are employees. Employees' spouses are 1/3 of the attendance. What is the percentage of the people in attendance who are not employees or employee spouses?
It depends on what attendance time one is looking for. If one is talking about school attendance time, then he or she can check that on the online school's website for grades and attendance.
The noun or adjective is spelled "attendant" (employee or helper, or present).