Yes, it is a noun. It is a person or their occupation.
The possessive noun of nurse is nurse's, for example, a nurse's uniform.
The plural form for the noun nurse is nurses.
Yes, the noun 'nurse' is a common noun, a general word for a person skilled or trained in caring for the sick and injured.The word 'nurse' is also a verb: nurse, nurses, nursing, nursed.
Yes, Nurse Ann is a proper noun. A person's (or a character's) name is always a proper noun.
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female. A nurse is a nurse, male or female.
No
The french noun for nurse is une nourrice (femine)
Yes, nurse is a common noun, unless it forms part of someone's title or designation:'My brother is a nurse at St William's Hospital.''I had to report to Nurse Smith when I went for my check-up.'
both can be a noun or a verb...if noun...nurse means a person who provides care. Registered Nurses are given the licensed to practice the profession of being a nurse bonded by legal terms. Nursing as a noun can be a course or a discipline. Nurse as a verb means to feed or to breastfeed, Nursing as a verb is a continuous form of the base form Nurse.
No, the noun 'nurse' is a common noun, a general word for any person trained to care for the sick and injured.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing; for example:Mary Ezra Mahoney, Registered NurseNurse Street, Red Deer, AB CanadaVisiting Nurse Associations of America, Arlington, VA
There is not a predicate noun in this sentence. The definition of a predicate noun is that it defines or restates the subject AND it has to follow a linking verb. example:Mrs.Smith is a nurse. the predicate noun would be nurse
Nurse Ann is a proper noun. It refers to a specific person.