No, toilet is a noun.
Yes, the word 'can' is both a verb and a noun.The noun 'can' is a word for a cylindrical metal container; a word for a thing.Example: "I bought a can of baked beans"In American slang the noun 'can' is a word for toilet or jail/prison.The verb 'can' is an auxiliary (helper) verb that modifies a verb as having the ability, power, or skill to.Example: "I can run a marathon".The verb 'can' is also a verb meaning to preserve food in a container.Example: "We will can the tomatoes from the garden."In American slang the verb 'can' means to fire from a job or position.
The Kikuyu word for the English word toilet is "choo."
No. Pay can be a verb (to spend money) or a noun (your wages), or noun adjunct (pay desk, pay increase), or possibly an adjective (pay toilet).
Toilet: مرحاض
You can use the same word, toilet, or otherwise badkamer.
The Hindi word for toilet is "शौचालय" (shouchalay).
To say "toilet" in Māori, you would use the word "tioata."
The plural of toilet is toilets.
It's french for dressing room and it gradually turn into the word toilet.
the word were is a LINKING VERB.
Verb 2. A Verb is an action word, a 'doing' word.
The word 'be' is indeed a verb.