No, "vile" is not a noun; it is an adjective. Nouns are words that refer to a person, place, thing, or idea, while adjectives describe or modify nouns.
The word "vile" has one syllable.
The noun form of the verb "noun" is "noun-ness" or "nominalization."
No the word notes is a plural noun. The singular noun is note.
The word 'princess' is a noun, a word for a person.
The word 'noun' is a single word and a singular noun. Other examples are:artistbabycabbagedrillEcuadorfantasygrandfatherhelpiceJellokneeLamborghinimousenickleOrlandopenquiltrhapsodysalamitrickurgencyVesuvius (Mount)waterxenonyamzilch
The word 'vile' is an adjective used to describe a noun as extremely unpleasant, nasty, or repulsive.Example use: There was a vile odor coming from the refrigerator.
The word "vile" has one syllable.
vile vile
Moroseness is a noun.
The abstract noun is lowness (state of being low or vile).
Vile.
Sentence: The vile creature slithered across my feet.
The Spanish word 'ruin' = mean, vile, base, low, despicable etc. (as adjective); wicked mean, or vile man (as noun) The English word 'ruin' = ruina, caida, bancarrota, et al (as noun); arruinar (verb)
evil, vile
yes
Vile is a noun. It's a small bottle that usually contains medicine.
'Cochino' means 'hog' (noun) in English, also 'dirty. filthy, vile' (adjective).