No, learn is a verb.
Yes, the word 'learning' is an abstract noun; a word for the process of acquiring knowledge.
Yes, the word 'learning' is an abstract noun; a word for the process of acquiring knowledge.
The noun 'school' is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a building or place for learning; a word for a thing. The noun 'school' is a standard collective noun for a group of fish.
Learning (noun) = torah (תורה), limud (לימוד), limudim (לימודים)
The word 'education' is a noun, a common, uncountable, abstract noun; a word for the knowledge or skill obtained or developed by a learning process.
Iocus et disciplina is the Latin equivalent of 'fun and learning'. In the word by word translation, the noun 'iocus' means 'fun, joke'. The conjunction 'et' means 'and'. The noun 'disciplina' means 'instruction, learning'.
The word learning is a verb. It is the present participle of learn. It can also be a noun in the case of an act where something is learned.
The abstract noun form for the concrete noun 'scholar' is scholarship.Example sentence:The professor's life is one of learning and scholarship.
No, the word "students" is not a verb. It is a plural noun that refers to individuals who are attending school or engaged in learning.
Yes, the word 'student' is a noun, a word for a person.
The word 'additional' is not a noun; additional is an adjective, a word that describes a noun (a countable or uncountable noun).The noun form is addition; a countable noun as a word for something that you add to something else (an addition to a product line, an addition to a building); an uncountablenoun as a word for the act of adding something to something else (addition is the first step in learning math).
No.But student is a noun