Yes, the word 'feat' is a noun, a singular, common, abstract noun; a word for an achievement that requires great courage, skill, or strength.
No, "feat" is a noun.
No, feat is a noun.
Feat is a noun. (a difficult accomplishment)
Feat is not a verb. Feat is a noun, as in, "He has accomplished a great feat by winning a gold medal in the Olympics." A synonym of feat is achievement.
No, it is a noun. In English, roughly speaking, if you can add "the", as well as "a" or "an" before a word, it is a noun.
It can be. The verb "to trick" means to fool, or to outwit. The noun "trick" is a sham, bogus act, illusion, or clever feat.
Feat.
A homophone for "feet" is "feat."
she has sandals on her feat. ♥ §
The plural of feat is feats.
If you can perform a standing broad jump of over 10 feet, that would be an astounding feat. He injured both feet while attempting the dangerous feat.
Nothing feat is a suffix, Ex: Defeat we it, roughly decompiled means to stop ones feat