noun, it is a thing. a verb is what you do and an adjective is discriptive words
There is nothing abstract about fat. The noun fat is a concrete noun, a word for a particular physical substance.
Proper noun
Fat is a noun. It's also an adjective; that is, it modifies, or describes, a noun. For instance, one might say, "the fat man," where fat is the adjective and man is the noun.
vwegnhmgvfj,rfh and that is what a discriptive paragraph means and this answer has been given to u by 2 FIVE YEAR OLDS!
adjective Fat could also be a noun. Fat on your body is a noun. Being fat is an adjective.
No, "Tom Brady" is a proper noun, not a common noun. It's the name of a specific person.Examples of common nouns for the proper noun "Tom Brady" are athlete, quarterback, father.
As fat as tom powell.. (he's big)
enthusiastic
No, "Tom Brady" is a proper noun, not a common noun. It's the name of a specific person.Examples of common nouns for the proper noun "Tom Brady" are athlete, quarterback, father.
Tom is a proper noun.
The word 'fat' is both a noun (fat, fats) and an adjective (fat, fatter, fattest). Examples:Noun: I removed most of the fat before broiling the steak.Adjective: Pick a fat pumpkin to make a nice round face.Some dictionaries designate 'fat' as a verb (fat, fats, fatting, fatted); however, the more common verb is to fatten (fattens, fattening, fattened).