Yes, toothpaste is a compound noun, made from tooth + paste.
No, toothpaste is a common noun. It can be used as a noun adjunct (attributive noun) in terms such as toothpaste tube.
Yes(Tooth + Paste = Toothpaste)
toothpaste contains a lot of elements like calcium,fluorine,nitrate,etc.we can determine the various elements through qualitative analysis.yes,toothpaste is a compound.
Toothpaste is one such word.
toothpaste and milk
The collective noun for toothpaste is a tube of toothpaste.
No, toothpaste is a common noun. It can be used as a noun adjunct (attributive noun) in terms such as toothpaste tube.
The collective noun for toothpaste is a tube of toothpaste.
Yes(Tooth + Paste = Toothpaste)
A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing. A proper noun for the common noun 'toothpaste' is the name of a toothpaste, such as Colgate, Crest, or Tom's of Maine.
The noun 'toothpaste' is an uncountable (mass) noun, a word for a substance.Units of toothpaste are expressed by using a noun counter(called a partitive noun), a noun that quantifies an uncountable noun; for example, a tube of toothpaste, an ounce of toothpaste, a glob of toothpaste.Toothpaste is not countable in itself, but tubes of toothpaste are. If you were in a factory, making toothpaste, you might have a vat of toothpaste which would be measured in terms of gallons. So, toothpaste would be measured, rather than counted. You would not ask how many toothpaste do you have, but how much. You could, however, ask how many tubes of toothpaste you have. Tubes are countable.
toothpaste contains a lot of elements like calcium,fluorine,nitrate,etc.we can determine the various elements through qualitative analysis.yes,toothpaste is a compound.
Is toothpaste a compound word
No. A compound noun is one which is formed by combining two separate words to make a new one. The example that comes up first in a Google search is the word toothpaste, which is formed from the words tooth and paste, but has the same meaning as neither of them.
Toothpaste is a mixture, not a compound and so there cannot be a chemical formula.
toothpaste
My can be an adjective. As a possessive pronoun it can modify nouns to tell which one.For example:My toothpaste is minty.Which toothpaste? My toothpaste. It modifies toothpaste which is a noun.