yes. A noun is a person, place, or thing.
Another answer:
Deck can be a verb when used in slag: Jack said, "Deck 'em," so Michael punched Joe in the jaw.
Deck is a noun or a verb. noun -- They stood on the deck and watched the sun set verb -- He was decked out in red and green.
The standard collective nouns for playing cards are:a pack of cardsa deck of cards
The noun 'deck' is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a platform built onto a ship, a bus, or a building; a word for a pack of playing cards; a word for a thing.
This is called a prepositional phrase. an example would be: on the deck. the preposition is "on". and the noun is deck.
I keep a deck of cards in my luggage in case of electronics failure.
Yes, the noun 'deck' is a common noun; a general word for any horizontal structure extending across a ship forming a floor; any unroofed platform like structure attached to a house or other building; a component or unit in sound-reproduction equipment; any pack of playing cards.The word 'deck' is also a verb: deck, decks, decking, decked.
A payment of tolls maybe??
The noun 'jack' is a common noun as a word for a device for lifting heavy things, and the face card in a deck of cards. The noun 'Jack' is a proper noun as the name of a person (place, or thing).
No, jack of diamonds is a common noun, a word for a playing card; any jack of diamonds in any deck of cards.
Hiss can be either a noun or a verb.Noun: The hiss from the tape deck was very annoying.Verb: The cat tends to hiss at anyone he doesn't recognize.
KAYO (meaning Knockout) Explanation: To "deck" is slang for hitting, therefore to"deck in the ring" is the term for a "KAYO" knockout in the boxing ring. "Deck" in this can have a double meaning as a verb refering to the action of hitting, and as a noun refering to the floor in the nautical term "deck" where the resulting knockout would send the person.
To "poop" (verb) is an informal term for the act of defecating or passing faeces. "Poop" (noun) is an informal term for faeces or excrement.