No the word filled is not a noun. It is a past tense verb.
The nigra closed the aids filled pool. Aids filled is a descriptive adjective. It describes pool, which is a noun.
The singular form of the plural noun potatoes is potato.The singular possessive form is potato's.Example: The potato's center was filled with sausage.
Not necessarily. It depends on the usage. An appositive is a noun or a noun phrase that is used to rename another noun that is beside it. The appositive in these sentences are bolded. In the first example 2012 is the appositive, renaming the year. In the second example, year is the name of a field.The year, 2012, was a positive one for the family.The empty field, year, needs to be filled in.
Yes, shipping is called a 'verbal noun' or a 'gerund', the present participle verb that ends in -ing and used as a noun. The -ing form of a verb is also an adjective. Examples:Noun: Shipping sometimes costs more than the price of the item.Verb: We are shipping the leftover inventory to the warehouse until next season.Adjective: Be sure that the shipping label is filled out clearly.
She dismissed his speech as nothing more than twaddle filled with empty words and meaningless platitudes.
Roger filled his car with gas.The possessive noun Roger's is replaced with the possessive pronoun his.
Yes, the word 'wonderland' is a noun; a word for a place that is filled with things that are beautiful, impressive, or surprising.
The noun form of the adjective "full" is fullness.The noun "fullness" is an abstract noun as a word for a quality of being complete; a quality of containing detail; a emotional state of being filled to capacity; a word for a concept.The noun "fullness" is a concrete noun as a word for the an appearance of plumpness or roundness; a physical state of being filled to capacity; a word for a physical state.
Water already is a noun; a non-count, common, concrete noun, a word for a substance, a thing.Example sentence: I filled my glass with water.Some synonyms for the noun water are:H2Oaquarainsalivatearswetnessriverlakeseaoceanpondpuddle
Enthusiasm is a noun. e.g. She was filled with enthusiasm.
Delight is a noun and a verb. "The arrival of the Snow Queen filled him with delight." (noun) "I delight in the sweet sound of music." (verb)
The word 'abound' is not a common noun; abound is a verb(abound, abounds, abounding, abounded); to present in large numbers; to be filled with or have an abundance of something.Abundance is the common, abstract noun form.
The nigra closed the aids filled pool. Aids filled is a descriptive adjective. It describes pool, which is a noun.
30 litres of petrol are filled because you're talking about more than one litre (plural).
Yes, the noun 'honeycomb' is a compound word, made up of the noun 'honey' and the noun 'comb' to form a word with a meaning of its own. Note: The word 'honey' also functions as a verb but the noun 'honeycomb' is a word for a 'comb' filled with 'honey', a noun.
The possessive form for the noun colonist is colonist's.Example: A colonist's day was filled with hard work.
Yes, the word 'his' is a pronoun functioning as a possessive adjective in this sentence.A possessive adjective is placed before a noun to describe the noun (his belly) as belonging to someone or something.The pronoun 'his' also functions as a possessive pronoun, a word that takes a noun that belongs to someone or something.Example: The belly he filled was his.