Yes, the word 'scale' is both a noun (scale, scales) and a verb (scale, scales, scaling, scaled)
Examples:
I'm afraid to step on the scale after the holiday meals. (noun)
He had a fish scale caught in his teeth. (noun)
I heard her practicing the scale on the piano. (noun)
He built a model exactly to scale. (noun)
He caught the fish so it's my job to scale them. (verb)
The surface of the iron had begun to scale. (verb)
It was amazing how easily the boy could scale the tree. (verb)
I watched the woman scale the pearls by size. (verb)
No, the noun scale is not a material noun. A material noun is a word for something that other things are made from. Some examples are:goldplasticironmilkleathercottonflourcopperrubberpapercementpetroleum
it is both. you can scale something by climbing it. but it is also a noun because there are scales, like say, a weight scale at a doctors office
The noun 'scales' is a plural noun, a word form two or more.The singular noun is 'scale'.
The word scale is a noun as in (e.g.) a musical scale. It can also be used as a verb.
The adjective in the sentence is "musical." It modifies the noun "scale."
No, the word "large scale" is typically not hyphenated when used as an adjective. However, it may be hyphenated when modifying a noun, such as "large-scale project."
The term "pay scale" is a noun that refers to the hierarchy of wage level, typically varying according to job title, salary or length of service. It is also called a "salary scale" or "wage scale".
Yes, the word 'magnitude' is a noun, a word for the great size or extent of something; the importance of something in influence or effect; the degree of brightness of a star, as represented by a number on a scale; the intensity of an earthquake represented by a number on a scale.
Yes, the noun 'temperature' is a commonnoun, a general word for the degree or intensity of heat present in a substance or object as measured on a scale.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing; for example the Celsius scale, a proper noun named after Swedish astronomer, Anders Celsius; or the Fahrenheit scale, a proper noun named after German physicist, Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit.
The word 'do' is a noun; a word for the first note of the musical scale; a social event such as a party; a hairstyle. Example:We're invited to the Smith's anniversary do.
The word pentachord is a noun. It is a musical term for five notes in a scale.
The proper noun, a temperature scale, is Fahrenheit(named for Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit).