Yes, the word 'tax' is a noun and a verb. Examples:
noun: The price is twenty dollars plus tax. The tax is nine percent.
verb: The proposal to tax the organization alarmed the board.
The singular noun is tax; the plural noun is taxes.The word tax is also a verb: tax, taxes, taxing, taxed.
"Taxes" is plural for "tax". "Tax's" is the possessive form.
In Spanish, tax (as a noun) is "impuesto".
The noun or verb "tax" can use the following suffixes: -able to form the adjective taxable (adverb taxably) -ing to form the present participle taxing (noun, adjective/adjunct, verb) -er to form the noun taxer -ation (-tion) to form the noun taxation (*The noun taxonomy is not based directly on the word tax.)
a noun but to tax is a verb
taxes
No, the noun 'taxes' is not a collective noun; taxes is the plural form for the noun tax. However, any noun can function as a collective noun in a suitable context without being a designated collective noun.
There is no standard collective noun for a group of accountants. However, collective nouns are an informal part of language. Any noun that suits the context can function as a collective noun.Examples of suggested collective nouns for accountants are: "A snooze of accountants""An audit of accountants""A balance of accountants""A sum of accountants""A fudge of accountants""An account of accountants"
The singular form of the noun taxes is tax.
consumo = excise tax(noun) sisa (noun) (it also means 'petty theft'!) cortar = cut (verb) imponer consumos sobre = impose excise tax on (verbal phrase)
Fox, box, tax, sax
The word 'wealthy' is a noun form, a word for rich people considered as a group, for example, 'tax breaks for the wealthy'.The word 'wealthy' is also the adjective form of the noun wealth.