Yes, the word 'industry' is a noun, a singular, common, abstract noun; a word for the economicactivity concerned with the processing of raw materials and manufacture of goods in factories; a word for a thing.
No. It is an adjective. The noun form is "industry." (the concept of working)
more industrious, most industrious
The industrious worker got a raise because he was diligent and hardworking.
degree
diligent, eager, dynamic, involved, energetic
'tools' is a noun. It is the plural form of the noun tool.
indstrious is one of the attitude of the human being
Industrialization is a noun.
"Industry" is a noun and, as such, does not have a comparative or superlative degree. The comparative and superlative degrees of the adjective industrial are more industrial and most industrial respectively.
more industrious and most industrious
No.An adverb adds information about a verb.Example sentences:* "That worker is very industrious." ... It is the person that is industrious, so industrious is an adjective. An adjective gives additional information about a noun. * "He works industriously." This tells us how he 'works'. 'Work' is a verb. A word that tells us more about a verb is an adverb, so industriously is an adverb.
more industrious, most industrious
* (Verb) to endeavor - to try * (Noun) endeavor - effort, attempt
more industrious
He was very industrious and always had good ideas for making money. Germany is a very industrious country. A class that are industrious will do well in this project.
Tagalog translation of industrious: masipag
adjective comparative superlative wet wetter wettest lazy lazier laziest industrious more industrious most industrious
The word industry to mean a collection of factories and businesses is a concrete noun (the fishing industry). The concept of industry (working hard or diligently) is an abstract noun.