Yes the word sustenance is a noun. It is a common noun.
The answer is sustenance. The suffix -ance is used to turn the verb sustain into a noun.
Yes, the noun 'need' is an abstract noun, a word for a necessity or requirement; a word something of basic sustenance; a word for a concept.
The abstract noun of "beggar" is "begging." It represents the act or practice of asking for help, typically in the form of money or food, as a means of survival or sustenance.
The abstract noun of the word "starve" is "starvation." It refers to the state or condition of suffering from a lack of food or nourishment. Starvation encompasses the experience and consequences of being deprived of essential sustenance.
This sustenance will do just fine.
There is no direct antonym for the noun 'desert', a word for a dry, barren area of land. Any noun for another type of topography would be an antonym for the noun desert, for example, ocean, prairie, forest, jungle, etc.
Food is another word for sustenance, as is subsistence.
Sustenance - 1998 is rated/received certificates of: UK:15
The term sustenance generally refers to the food and drink which are necessary to 'sustain' life.The hiker had gone without sustenance for days and was very weak.
corthù, beatha
I think they were called "Sustenance Tickets" and the dole was just a nick name for it, but im not 100% sure.
there was to many subsistences in the earth