Yes, "toe" is a noun. It refers to one of the digits of the foot, located between the foot and the rest of the toes.
The prepositional phrases are 'with mud' and 'from head to toe', because there can be multiple prepositional phrases. The noun 'mud' is object of the preposition 'with'. The noun phrase 'head to toe' is the object of the preposition 'from'.
The plural form of the noun toe is toes.The plural possessive form is toes'.Example: His toes' injury was a result an escalator accident.
The homophone of "toe" is "tow."
The word "toe" has a long o sound, as in the word "toe".
The homophone for "tow" is "toe."
Yes, toe is a common noun.
camel toe ;)
Yes. noun toe - My big toe became infected. verb toe - Jack toed the ball towards the goal. - past tense.
The prepositional phrases are 'with mud' and 'from head to toe', because there can be multiple prepositional phrases. The noun 'mud' is object of the preposition 'with'. The noun phrase 'head to toe' is the object of the preposition 'from'.
No, it is a plural noun. It means more than one toe.
Umbrage is a noun. Pardon my umbrage, but you are standing on my toe.
The plural form of the noun toe is toes.The plural possessive form is toes'.Example: His toes' injury was a result an escalator accident.
The noun 'cyclist' is a common gender noun, a word for a male or a female bicycle (motor bike, motorcycle) rider.A neuter noun is a word for something that has no gender, such as a bicycle, a toe, a rock, etc.
First toe (Big toe) Second toe (Index toe) Third toe (Middle toe) Fourth toe (Fore toe) Fifth toe (Baby toe)
Hallux (big toe) Second toes (long toe) Third toe (middle toe) Fourth toe (ring toe) Fifth Toe (pinky toe, baby toe, or little toe)
Toe to Toe was created in 1992.
TOE-toe.