The English language does not have 'positive' nouns (location is a noun); the designation for 'positive' is used for adjectives. For example:
Positive: nice
Comparative: nicer
Superlative: nicest
Positive: positive
Comparative: more positive
Superlative: most positive
Location is a noun.
Yes, it is a noun, as a location or structure. A grave is a similar noun.
The noun forms for the verb to locate are locator, location, and the gerund, locating.
Comparison of adjectives:Positive degree - the simplest form.Comparative degree - comparing two things or persons.Superlative degree - comparing three or more things or persons.Try this site if you want more.
No, the noun 'Atlanta' is a proper noun, the name of a specific place.Examples of common noun synonyms for the proper noun 'Atlanta' are city, capital, location.
Exact is an adjective; location is a noun.
Location is a noun. It refers to a particular place or position.
Location is a noun.
Yes, it is a noun. It identifies a location.
Yes, it is a noun, as a location or structure. A grave is a similar noun.
The noun forms for the verb to locate are locator, location, and the gerund, locating.
yes
The abstract noun for "locate" is "location." It refers to the act or process of determining or where something is situated.
Yes, it is a noun. It is a slang term for an anatomical location.
Nouns do not have 'positive' forms.Adjectives are the part of speech that are positive, comparative, or superlative; for example:The positive form of the adjective 'cold' is 'cold'.The comparative form is 'colder'.The superlative form is 'coldest'.
The noun 'positive' is an abstract noun as a word for agood, affirmative, or constructive quality or attribute.The noun 'positive' is a concrete noun as a word for apositive electric charge; aphotographic image in which the lights and darks appear as they do in nature; aquantity greater than zero.
Yes, "anywhere" is a noun that refers to a place or location that is unspecified or not known.