no its a verb
Yes, 'understanding' is an abstract noun, a word for an emotion, knowledge, or belief. Understanding has no physical presence.
The abstract noun form for the verb to understand is the gerund, understanding.
"Understanding" is a noun.
The noun 'understanding' (a gerund) is a abstract noun; a word for the ability to comprehend; a person's perception of something; a word for an informal agreement; a word for a concept.
Yes, the noun 'understanding' is a count noun as a word for an informal agreement.The plural form is understandings.The noun 'understanding' is an uncountable noun as a word for the ability to comprehend or sympathy for others' feelings.This use has no plural form.
Yes it is a noun sometimes a verb it depends on how you are using it
Understanding is both a verb and a noun, it's also and adjective. Examples:As a verb: I am understanding the principle but I'm still getting the wrong answer.As a noun: It is my understanding that I will make a cake and you will make potato salad for the picnic.As an adjective: All I need is an understanding friend to get me through this.
The noun form of the verb to understand is the gerund, understanding.
The noun form of the verb to understand is the gerund, understanding.
Verb: misinterpret; misunderstand Noun: confusion
No, "understanding" is an abstract noun because it represents a concept, idea, or state of being rather than a physical object that can be touched or seen.
The noun 'intuition' is a singular, common, abstract noun; a word for an ability or understanding, a word for a thing.