Yes, the word current is a noun, a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a stream of water or air in motion; a word for a thing.
The spelling "currant" is a dried grape (similar to raisins). The spelling "current" can be a noun (the flow of electrical energy) or an adjective (present, up-to-date).
When used as a noun, "time" is an abstract noun. It is most of the time a common noun.
"thermal energy" is a compound noun
The noun 'timepieces' is a concrete noun, a word for physical objects that can be seen and touched.The noun 'time' is an abstract noun, a word for a concept.
Yes, the noun 'furniture' is a mass noun, also called an uncountable noun. The noun 'furniture' is a type of aggregate noun, a word representing an indefinite number of elements.
The abstract noun form of the adjective current is currentness, a word for the quality of relating to the present time.The noun 'current' is a concrete noun as a word for the movement of air, water, or electricity; a word for physical movement.
The term 'conventional current' is a singular, common, compound noun; a word for current flowing from positive to negative as opposed to electron flow where current flow is from negative to positive.
The word current is an adjective (at the present time, occurring now) and a noun (a stream of water or air in motion); for example: Adjective: The current President of the US is Barack Obama. Noun: The current took the little paper boat around a bend and out of sight.
Adjective: relating to the present time. "Our current president is ..." Noun: A movement of something. "An electrical current", "A current of water".
No, it is not a preposition. It is a noun or an adjective.
The word current is a noun and an adjective. The noun form is fluid that moves continuously in one direction. The adjective form means to be occurring at the present time.
you would write it as the current tv show I'm watching is the lab rats ^ yes, this shows the use of the word current but as a verb, but it has two more meanings that i can think of as a noun: eg. I ate a current eg. The football was swept away by the current in the water
Yes, "news" is a noun that refers to information about current events or recent happenings.
The word driftwood is a noun. It is a piece of wood that drifts alongside a current or has been cast ashore.
No, it is an adverb, or a noun. It refers to the evening hours of the current day.
Current = noun, a body of air or water moving in a definite directionCurrant = a small dried seedless grape
Currents is a noun. It's the plural form of current.