Yes, the word 'visual' is an adjective and a noun.
The noun 'visual' is a word for something used to illustrate an idea, a presentation, or a promotion; a word for a thing.
The word 'visual' is a noun, a word for a picture, piece of film, or display used to illustrate or accompany something; a word for a thing.Related noun forms are vision and visualization.The noun form of the adjective 'visual' is visualness.
visual "visual" is strictly an adjective though sometimes used colloquially as an noun. The noun "sight" is "vision". I assume you are not talking about gun sights.
no coz a verb iz a doing word No. To visualize is a verb. Visual is technically an adjective but is commonly used today as a noun, as in "Can I get a visual on that please".
"Visual" is an adjective meaning something you can see. Here it is being used as a noun meaning a picture or illustration.
Yes, it can be (video output, video shop). Video (referring to visual or audiovisual recordings or visual displays) can be a noun or an adjective.
The noun 'narrator' is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for someone who tells a story or describes something visual; a word for a person.A related noun form is narration.
It is an acronym for a noun : Video Cassette Recorder. VCRs use magnetic tape to record audio-visual information.
Yes, "chart" is a noun. It refers to a visual representation of data or information, often in the form of a diagram or graph.
Yes, the word 'map' is both a verb and a noun.The noun map is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a visual or relief representation, of the whole or a part of an area of the earth or the heavens; a word for a thing.
Yes, the term 'music video' is a noun, a compound noun; a word for a visual recording accompanying a piece of music or a song; a word for a thing.
The noun 'seeing' is a gerund, the present participle of the verb 'to see' that functions as a noun in a sentence.The noun 'seeing' is a common, uncountablenoun.The noun 'seeing' is an abstract noun as a word for awareness or understanding; a word for a concept.The noun 'seeing' is a concrete noun as a word for visual observation; a physical sense.
Yes, the noun 'television' is a common noun, a general word for a system or device for transmitting or receiving visual images; a general word for any television of any kind.