Yes the word flickering can be a noun. It is also the present participle of the verb to flicker.
No. It may cause eye strain, but flickering a standard consumer lightbulb will not make you blind.
All lights flicker its just that they do it so fast you don't see it, but when you can tell a light is flickering it is underpowered, try changing the plug if its not the original one to a higher amped.
When used as a noun, "time" is an abstract noun. It is most of the time a common noun.
"thermal energy" is a compound noun
The noun 'timepieces' is a concrete noun, a word for physical objects that can be seen and touched.The noun 'time' is an abstract noun, a word for a concept.
Flickering can be a verb and a noun. Verb: The present participle of the verb 'flicker'. Noun: A short uncertain burst.
No, the term 'flickering light' is a noun phrase, a group of words based on a noun.The noun phrase 'flickering light' is made up of the noun'light' described by the adjective 'flickering'.A noun phrase functions as a noun in a sentence.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.The pronoun that takes the place of the noun phrase 'flickering light' is it.Example: The shopkeeper looked up at the flickering lightand said he would need to get it fixed.The noun phrase 'flickering light' is the object of the preposition 'at';The pronoun 'it' takes the place of the noun phrase in the second part of the sentence.
Flickering can be used as a noun, a verb, or an adjective. It depends on the context of the sentence. The rarely used word "flickeringly" would be the adverb form.
Flickering is the present participle of the verb flicker. It can be used as a verb to create the progressive tenses, as a gerund (verbal noun), and as an adjective.Verb: The lights were flickering all night.Gerund: Flickering is a noun in this sentence.Adjective: The flickering lights signaled a power outage.
adverb
No, flickering is not an adverb. Flickering is a verb form that can show continuous or repeated action, like "The candle was flickering." If used as an adjective, it could describe something that is shifting or wavering in brightness.
Yes. It is a verb form. It is the present participle in the continuous tenses (is flickering, was flickering) but can also be used to describe something, where it is an adjective e.g. a flickering candle. It can also be a noun (gerund).
The flickering of the candlelight was relaxing.The lights keep flickering, we should call an electrician.The doctor noticed that his eyelid was flickering.
The light began flickering before it went out. Flickering lights frighten me.
Born of the Flickering was created in 1996.
Flickering Lights was created in 2000.
flickering lights