No, the word 'hoarse' is an adjective, a word used to describe a voice as harsh and rough due to a sore throat.
Yes, the noun 'snoring' is a concrete noun, a word for breathing with a rough hoarse noise while sleeping; a word for a physical sound.
Your throat is hoarse.
She had an hoarse voice because of her sore throat. Hoarse is another word for rough or harsh. After shouting hard she had a hoarse voice.
The homophone for "hoarse" is "horse."
A hoarse is a cross between a flamingo and a goldfish.
The word 'horse' is a noun and a verb.A noun will function as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.Examples:The horse was in the barn.The noun 'horse' is the subject of the sentence.The noun 'barn' is the object of the preposition 'in'.I'll bring some carrots which my horse loves.The noun 'carrots' is the direct object of the verb 'bring'.The noun 'horse' is the subject of the relative clause.
The hoarse horse was unable to neigh. The horse riding instructor was hoarse by the time the lesson was over.
When I had a sore throat, I was talking in a hoarse voice.
Hoarse - as in a sore throat makes your voice hoarse
The homophone for the word "hoarse" is "horse."
hoarse: Their voices were hoarse from screaming their support at the football game.
my voice is HOARSE from screaming at your mom all night