Yes, "thief" is a common noun. It is a person who steals something.
Thief is the noun.It can be formed from the verb thieve.
No, the noun 'burglar' is a common noun, a general word for a thief who enters a building with intent to steal.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing. A proper noun for the common noun 'burglar' is the name of the burglar.
The correct abstract noun for "thief" is "theft."
"Thief" is a singular noun. The plural form is "thieves."
The noun form of the word "burglar" is "burglary."
A thief is a thief no matter if he/she is male or female. There is no gender for thief.
Yes, the noun 'burglar' is a common noun, a general word for a thief who enters a building with intent to steal.
Yes, the word 'scoundrel' is a noun; a singular, common, abstract noun.
Yes, thief is a noun, a singular, common noun, a word for a person who steals, especially secretly or without open force; one guilty of theft or larceny.
The word thieves is the plural form for the noun thief, a common noun; a word for someone who steals from others, a person.
The word 'steal' is an abstractnoun as an informal word for an extreme bargain, something acquired at a cost far below its real value.The word 'steal' is a concrete noun as a word for a type of action in baseball.The abstract noun form of the verb to steal is the gerund, stealing, as a word for avoiding detection by moving carefully.A related abstract noun form is stealth.
No, thief is a noun.
No, the noun 'burglar' is a common noun, a general word for a thief who enters a building with intent to steal.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing. A proper noun for the common noun 'burglar' is the name of the burglar.
The noun form of the word "burglar" is "burglary."
"Thief" is a singular noun. The plural form is "thieves."
The word 'thief' is not an adjective, it's a noun, a concrete noun, a word for a person.The abstract noun form is thievery.
Thief is the noun.It can be formed from the verb thieve.