Score can be a noun or a verb. It is a noun when it is used to refer to the number of points given to a player or team (e.g., the score of the game), a printed copy of a musical composition, or a notch cut into a surface. It is a verb when it is used to refer to the act of making a point in a game, notating a musical composition, or making a notch.
The noun score is a count noun. Example:My score was the highest of all the scores.
Yes. It's the past tense of the verb to score.
Score is a noun for a value (game, credit, etc) and a verb to mean cut with a line or lines. It is an archaic number value (20) that is not used as an adjective. As a noun adjunct, it appears with nouns (e.g. score table), but the related adjective is "scored."
No, it is not. Grade can be a verb with distinct meanings (to score, to level) or a noun with the same general concept (a score, a level or level rise). It can be a noun adjunct in terms such as grade crossing.
No, it is not an adverb. Score is a noun, or verb. It is also an archaic term for "twenty."
The noun score is a count noun. Example:My score was the highest of all the scores.
Score can be a noun or a verb. NOUN: The score of the game was 32 to 16 and our team won. VERB: Try to score as many points as you can.
Yes. It's the past tense of the verb to score.
Score is a noun for a value (game, credit, etc) and a verb to mean cut with a line or lines. It is an archaic number value (20) that is not used as an adjective. As a noun adjunct, it appears with nouns (e.g. score table), but the related adjective is "scored."
No. Scores is a noun (plural of score) and a verb (third person singular conjugation of score).
as a verb, "score" as a noun, "goods" as a noun, "grasp"
The word scoring can be a noun and a verb. The noun form is the process of keeping score in a particular sport. The verb form is the present participle of the verb "score".
The word 'score' is both a verb and a noun.Examples:With practice you will score more points each game. (verb)The score is 30-10 at this point. (noun)
The noun 'opera' is a singular, common noun. The noun 'opera' is an abstract noun as a word for a branch of music or drama. The noun 'opera' is a concrete noun as a word for a score of opera, a performance of opera, or an opera theater.
No, it is not. Grade can be a verb with distinct meanings (to score, to level) or a noun with the same general concept (a score, a level or level rise). It can be a noun adjunct in terms such as grade crossing.
Yes, the word 'save' is both a noun (save, saves) and a verb (save, saves, saving, saved).The noun 'save' is a sports term for not allowing an opponent to score.
No, the word 'scored' is not a noun; the word 'scored' is the past participle past tense of the verb to score. The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective(scored points, scored surface).The word 'score' is the noun form, a common noun; a word for a group of twenty things; a line or cut made with a with an instrument; the complete written music with all of the individual parts; a record of points made by competing teams or players; a duty or injury kept in mind for later action (settle a score); the facts of a situation, the grounds, the reason.The noun forms for the verb to score are scorer (the one who scores) and the gerund, scoring; both common nouns.