YES!
No, freak is not a verb. Freak is a noun.
The noun 'cricket', the insect, is a countable noun: one cricket, two crickets. The noun 'cricket', the game, is an uncountable noun; plurals are expressed in terms of matches; one cricket match, a series of cricket matches.
No, the noun 'cricket' is a common noun, a general word for a type of insect; a general word for a game played with a ball and bat.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing; for example, Jiminy Cricket (a character in "The Adventures of Pinocchio") or the International Cricket Council.
The term 'cricket team' is a singular, common, compound noun, a word for a thing.
The cast of My Neighbor the Freak - 2001 includes: Doug Dezzani as Jimmy Emily Petta as Cricket
The word crickets is already a plural noun. The singular noun is cricket.
The scary house made the young girl "freak" out. This is not traditional grammar but modern 'slang', and is used as a verb, = go bizarre ! As a noun or an adjective, this word can be used as follows: His peculiar hair-style made everyone consider him a 'freak'. (noun). The plane skidded sideways, in a freak accident. (adj.)
Cricket, regardless of whether you are referring to the sport or the insect, is a common and not a proper noun. Proper nouns refer to unique entities (objects, people, places, things, ideas, et cetera) that are normally capitalized and cannot be preceded by an article. Since neither the sport nor the insect fits this definition, cricket is a common noun.
Yes. Since Australia has only two cricket teams, one for men and one for women, that is the only Australian's women cricket team. Therefore it is a proper noun.
No, the word 'freaked' is the past participle, past tense of the informal (slang) verb to freak. The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.The word 'freak' is verb, an adjective, and a noun.The noun 'freak' is a concrete noun as a word for a strange, abnormal, or unusual person, thing, or event; a person who is obsessed with something; a word for a physical person or thing.A related noun is the abstract noun form of the adjective 'freakish' which is freakishness, a word for a quality.
"ish" is the suffix. When added to the adjective "blue" (the stem in this case) it indicates approximation. Other common use of this suffix can be turning a noun to an adjective, similarly to the suffix "y": "Freak" (noun) + y = "freaky" (adjective) "Freak" (noun) + ish = "freakish" (adjective)
The anagram is the plural noun ornaments.