No, the word 'referred' is a verb, the past participle, past tense of the verb to refer. The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.
The noun forms of the verb to refer are referrer, referral, and the gerund, referring.
That is the correct spelling of "referred" and the noun form is a "referral."
Each latin noun has five forms referred to as declension.
Bulwark is a noun when referred to a wall used as a fortification. It is a verb as in to defend or fortify as if with a bulwark
The noun 'fear' is an abstract noun; a word for an emotion; a word for a thing.An abstract noun is sometimes referred to as an 'idea noun'.
The noun forms of the verb to refer are referrer, reference, referral, and the gerund, referring.
The collective noun for dirt is often referred to as "soil." However, in a more informal context, it can also be referred to as a "pile" of dirt. While there isn't a widely recognized collective noun specifically for dirt, these terms capture the idea of grouping dirt together.
If it is only one, then it is a singular noun.
A proper noun for poem could be "Haiku," "Sonnet," or "Ode," depending on the specific type of poem being referred to.
"Porcupines" is already a plural noun. The singular form is porcupine. A group of porcupines is commonly referred to as a "prickle" of porcupines.
Swallow, referring to the action of swallowing, is a verb. The bird, however, is a common concrete count noun. (Can just be referred to as a common noun)
"Last week" is considered a noun phrase. "Week" is the noun, and "last" serves as an adjective modifying the noun to specify which week is being referred to.
He is often referred to as President Kennedy or JFK.