Yes, the word 'fifth' is both a noun and an adjective.
Whe the word 'fifth' stands on its own, it is a noun.
Example: A fifth of the class got a perfect score.
When the word 'fifth' precedes a noun to describe that noun, its an adjective.
Example: Mine is the fifth house from the corner.
The word 'supply' is both a verb and a noun.Examples:The hotel can supply a guide for our excursion. (verb)By the fifth day the supply of drinking water was gone. (noun)
C is incorrect. You do capitalize the first word of every sentence, and each of the seasons is a proper noun. Each of the months is a proper noun, too, but not the days. For example, you would not capitalize "fifth" in, "August fifth" or "first" in "the first of February."
No, it is not. It is a adjective meaning previous, or a noun meaning the first of two (not the latter).Rarely, it is used to describe a school form student (e.g. fifth former).
It is not necessary to capitalize fifth grade.I just finished fifth grade.My teacher in fifth grade was kind.Fifth grade was easy.
One-fifth in Tagalog is "isang-panglima."
No, the word 'fifth' is a noun and an adjective.Examples:I made the appointment for the fifth of the month. (noun)The office is on the fifth floor. (adjective)A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence. The pronoun that takes the place of the noun 'fifth' is it.Example:This book is the fifth in the series. It picks up the story right where the last book left off.
That is the correct spelling of the plural noun fifths.
Yes, 'fifth graders' is a compound noun, a word made of two or more individual words that merge to form a noun with a meaning of its own.
Yes, it is considered an adjective if used with a noun (fifth place), and can also be a noun. It is the ordinal number (5th) for the cardinal number five (5).
A company of soldiers is the answer you're looking for.
The word 'supply' is both a verb and a noun.Examples:The hotel can supply a guide for our excursion. (verb)By the fifth day the supply of drinking water was gone. (noun)
The word 'supply' is both a verb and a noun.Examples:The hotel can supply a guide for our excursion. (verb)By the fifth day the supply of drinking water was gone. (noun)
Bridgette is a noun, a singular proper noun. The 's on the end makes it a possessive form, showing something belongs to Bridgette.A pronoun is a word that stands in for a noun, such as her, my, I, he, she. Example sentence:Bridget's mother said that she will return on the fifth. (she is the pronoun that stands in for Bridget)
The word 'departing' is the present participle, present tense of the verb to depart. The present participle of the verb is also a gerund, a verbal noun, and an adjective. Examples: Verb: We will be departing on the fifth. Noun: Departing is scheduled for June. Adjective: The departing flight is at six AM. A related noun form is departure.
The anagrams are yam and may, also the proper noun May (fifth month, given name).
C is incorrect. You do capitalize the first word of every sentence, and each of the seasons is a proper noun. Each of the months is a proper noun, too, but not the days. For example, you would not capitalize "fifth" in, "August fifth" or "first" in "the first of February."
Yes. Antarctica is the fifth largest continent in the world. You would need to capitalize this word whenever you wrote it. It is considered a 'place'. A noun is a person, place, or thing - and a PROPER noun means that the noun must be capitalized because it names a PARTICULAR (place).