Yes, the word 'letters' is a noun, the plural form of the noun 'letter'; a word for the written representation of the sounds of human speech; a word for messages or communications written on paper; a word for things.
The word 'letters' is also the third person, singular of the verb to letter.
No, the word 'your' is a possessive adjective, a type of pronoun. The word 'letters' is a plural noun.The term 'your letters' is a nounphrase, any word or group of words based on a noun or pronoun (without a verb) that can function in a sentence as a subject, object of a verb or a preposition. The noun phrase 'your letters' is based on the noun 'letters'.EXAMPLESnoun phrase as subject: Your letters are always so cheerful.noun phrase as object: I keep your letters in a fancy box.
Samuel.
Neither. It is a noun
The letters "ftneo" spell "often" -- but it is an adverb, not a noun.
elephants
When it describes a noun. "Block" letters are plain capital letters.
It depends how you use the word. Here are some examples:Did you save all the letters he wrote to you? (noun)He plays three or four highschool sports, but I hope he letters in football. (verb)The child can write all the letters in the alphabet. (noun)
The word bucket can be made, and bucket is a noun.
Those letters spell the abstract noun unhappiness.
The anagram is the proper noun Singapore.
The word secret is a noun or an adjective.As a noun -- She told me a secret.As an adjective -- We used a secret code in our letters.
"Painter" is a noun. If a word ends in "-er" and the preceding letters spell a verb, the original word is almost always an "agency" noun.