No, the word 'enough' is not a noun. The word 'enough' is an adjective, an adverb, an indefinitepronoun, and an interjection.
Examples:
There's no such thing as enough chips in the cookies. (adjective)
If you drive far enough north, you come to the river. (adverb)
You may have some, we have enough for everyone. (indefinite pronoun)
Enough! It's starting to spill over the top. (interjection)
"Enough" is an adjective or adverb that indicates sufficiency or adequacy. It is not a noun.
In the sentence "it was enough," the word "enough" is functioning as a pronoun. It is replacing a noun or noun phrase, in this case, specifying a sufficient quantity or degree.
Yes, "lack" is a noun that refers to the state of being without or not having enough of something.
The word "plenty" can be used as either a noun or an adverb. As a noun, it means a large amount or more than enough. As an adverb, it means to a great extent or fully.
Yes, the word 'sample' is a noun (sample, samples), a verb (sample, samples, sampling, sampled), and an adjective.Examples:Would you like to try a sample of our fudge? (noun)Yes, I will sample the fudge. (verb)A sample taste is not enough. I will take a pound. (adjective)
An object of a preposition is the noun, pronoun, or noun phrase that follows a preposition in a sentence. For example, in the phrase "the book on the table," "table" is the object of the preposition "on."
The word 'enough' is not a noun. The word enough is an adjective, an adverb, and an indefinite pronoun, which takes the place of a noun for an unspecified amount. Examples:Adjective: We've made enough sandwiches for an army.Adverb: He thought enough about how to solve that problem.Indefinite pronoun: You've written three pages, I think this is enough.
It can be (enough food for an army). It can also be an adverb (chopped enough, tough enough) and a noun (eight is enough).
adequacy is a noun that means the quality of being enough or good enough.
In the sentence "it was enough," the word "enough" is functioning as a pronoun. It is replacing a noun or noun phrase, in this case, specifying a sufficient quantity or degree.
Yes, the noun 'taco' is a countable noun, the plural form is tacos.Example: One taco will not be enough. Get two tacos for me.
Yes, 'enough' is an indefinitepronoun as a word that takes the place of a noun for an unknown or unnamed amount that is a sufficient quantity. Example:I made enough for six to eight servings.The word enough is an adjective when placed before a noun: We have enough milk for the week.The word enough is an adverb when modifying an adjective: No more sugar, it's sweet enough.
No, the word 'enough' is not a noun or a verb. The word 'enough' is an adjective, an adverb, an indefinite pronoun, and an interjection.Examples:There's no such thing as enough chips in the cookies. (adjective)If you drive far enough north, you come to the river. (adverb)You may have some, we have enough for everyone. (indefinite pronoun)Enough! It's starting to spill over the top. (interjection)
No, the word 'enough' is not a noun. The word 'enough' is an adjective, an adverb, an indefinite pronoun, and an interjection.Examples:There's no such thing as enough chips in the cookies. (adjective)If you drive far enough north, you come to the river. (adverb)You may have some, we have enough for everyone. (indefinite pronoun)Enough! It's starting to spill over the top. (interjection)
Yes, the noun 'steak' is a countable noun; one steak or enough steaks for everyone.
(noun) leòr (adverb) gu leòr
There is no standard collective noun for a group of laboratories. This is most likely that laboratories were not in groups frequently enough for a collective noun to come into common usage.
You cannot convert an adjective to a noun. Given enough adjectives, you may be able to figure out the noun they are describing, however.