Laughter is a noun, as in the 'sound' of laughing
Laughter is a noun. Laugh, laughs, laughing, and laughed are the verb forms.
The word laughter is a noun. ("Funny" things cause laughter, or laughing.) An adjective that describes things that can cause laughter could be "laughable" although it has a connotation of "ridiculous" rather than merely "funny."
Yes, it can be, to mean either subdued (restrained laughter) or physically secured (a restrained prisoner). It is the past tense and past participle of the verb to restrain, so is otherwise a verb form.
In the sentence "Laughter bings joy to our lives." joy is used as a noun. Brings is a verb that says what joy does.
Laughable
The word laughed is the past participle of the verb to laugh, which is also an adjective. The present participle of a verb (the -ing word) is a verbal noun called a gerund, laughing; the present participle of the verb is also an adjective (laughingchildren).The abstract noun form for the verb to laugh is laughing(laughing makes you feel good). Other noun forms are the word laugh (a good laugh) and laughter (the sound of laughter).
Laughter is a noun. Laugh, laughs, laughing, and laughed are the verb forms.
To change "laughter" into a verb, you can use "laugh." For example, "She laughs loudly at his jokes."
The word laughter is a noun. ("Funny" things cause laughter, or laughing.) An adjective that describes things that can cause laughter could be "laughable" although it has a connotation of "ridiculous" rather than merely "funny."
Yes, it can be, to mean either subdued (restrained laughter) or physically secured (a restrained prisoner). It is the past tense and past participle of the verb to restrain, so is otherwise a verb form.
In the sentence "Laughter bings joy to our lives." joy is used as a noun. Brings is a verb that says what joy does.
Laughable
No, it is a verb or a noun (to go around, to surround; a round shape). The adjective form is circular.
The word 'laughing' is a noun form, it is the present participle of the verb 'to laugh' which is a gerund (verbal noun). The present participle of the verb is also an adjective. Other noun forms are laugh and laughter.
The adjective form for humor is humorous (more humorous, most humorous).The adverb form for humor is humorously: He humorously described an incident at the mini-mart.The noun form is humor; a singular, common, abstract noun. Another noun form is humorousness.The word humor is also a verb (humor, humors, humoring, humored).
It means the sound of laughing. Laughter is the noun form of the verb "to laugh."
Adjective.