It can be, when used to mean a benefit: This new law is a plus for us.
Ordinarily it serves as a conjunction.
2000000000 plus 70000000 plus 100000 plus 70000 plus 3000 plus 800 plus 10 is equal to 2,070,173,810
Simplicity is the noun form.
2,070,110,810
The abstract noun form of the verb to begin is the gerund, beginning.The noun 'beginning' is an abstract noun as a word for the point in time at which something starts; any form of time is a concept.The noun 'beginning' is a concrete noun as a word for the place that something starts; a word for a physical place.
The word 'grateful' is an adjective, a word that describes a noun (grateful child); the noun form is gratefulness. Another noun form is gratitude. Both gratefulness and gratitude are common nouns.
Difficult subjects came up and secretaries took notes.
Example of a noun plus a noun equals a noun:four + two = six (words for numbers are nouns)
Yes, you can start a sentence with the word plus (as a noun or adjective, not as a verb). Examples: Noun: Plus is the sign of addition. Noun: Plus is the only entry I want to see on my savings account. Adjective: Plus signs after the A were spread across the top of my math test!
I am an English professor. The subject is 'I'. The linking verb is 'am'. 'An English professor' is a noun acting as predicate noun.
She is a doctor. They were musicians. I am a teacher.
Originally (in French), they were an Adj plus a Noun, but now it's a Noun.
My dictionary said plus is a noun, an adjective, a preposition and a conjunction but not a verb.
It's called a preposition phrase.
cloudburst starburst and bankrupt
le français (masculine article, plus masculine noun / or adjective) - la française (feminine article plus feminine noun / or adjective)
send - sender
Actually, 2x + 3y + z is an expression, because it is a mathematical noun.