Can you happiness someone or something. No. Happiness is not something you can do, so happiness is not a verb.
Happiness is a noun.
The verb of happiness is happy. As in "to be happy".
Happy is an adjective. Happiness is a noun.
Matter is a noun and a verb. As a noun: This is no laughing matter. As a verb: Love and happiness matter to many people.
Santosh Means Happiness Santosh is Sanskrit name. Sanskrit verb is Tush, Tosh=to make / be Happy. san=Special. Hence, Santosh = Special Happiness = Contentment = "Delight".
The noun 'love' and the noun 'happiness' are singular, common, abstract nouns; words for emotions; words for things.The word 'love' is also a verb: love, loves, loving, loved.
The verb of happiness is happy. As in "to be happy".
"Happiness" is an adverb.
The word happiness is not a verb, it's a noun, a singular, common, abstract noun. There is no verb form for the word happy or happiness, it would be phrased 'make happy', 'be happy' or 'feel happy', etc.
Underline the verb in each sentence? A governess raises a child in a private home.
Happy is an adjective. Happiness is a noun.
Matter is a noun and a verb. As a noun: This is no laughing matter. As a verb: Love and happiness matter to many people.
Matter is a noun and a verb. As a noun: This is no laughing matter. As a verb: Love and happiness matter to many people.
No, the word 'happy' is not a verb; happy is an adjective, a word that describes a noun. The noun form is happiness; the adverb form is happily. There is no verb form.
Matter is a noun and a verb. As a noun: This is no laughing matter. As a verb: Love and happiness matter to many people.
No, "happier" is not a verb. It is actually an adjective that describes a person or thing experiencing more happiness than another.
The word "fake" can function as both an adjective and a noun. As an adjective, it describes something that is not genuine or real. As a noun, it refers to a person or thing that is not authentic.
The nouns in the sentence are:happiness, direct object of the verb 'known'.day, object of the preposition 'before'.Note: the form happiness's is the possessive form of the noun happiness. This form is incorrect because the noun happiness is not indicating possession of anything in the sentence.