No the word vital is an adjective.
For example: The heart is vital to surviving.
"Vital" is an adjective. It doesn't have a plural form. The noun form of "vital" is "vitality".
The abstract noun forms for the adjective vital are vitalness and vitality. The word vitals is a plural noun form, a word for the organs of the body necessary to sustain life such as the heart, brain, lungs, etc.; or the essential elements of anything.
Noun forms for the adjective vital are vitalness and vitality.Another noun form is vitals, a word for organs of the body that are essential to life, such as heart, brain, lungs, etc.
No, except at the beginning of a sentence because it is not a proper noun.
The correct spelling of the plural noun is nutrients(vital food components).
Definition: To remove the contents of: or Take away a vital part of something. The noun form for the verb to eviscerate is eviscerator, the one who eviscerates, and evisceration, the act of eviscerating.
The word essential is an adjective. It means to be necessary.
The spelling parament is a religious vestment.Some other possible words are:paramount (adjective) - of highest or vital importance, primaryparliament, Parliament (noun, proper noun) - legislative body, congressparchment (noun) - writing material made from dried animal skinexperiment (noun, verb) - a test, or to perform investigative tests
The nature of speech communication entails a number of components. There has to be a sender, receiver and content among others vital aspects.
The collective noun for carcasses is "carrion." "Carrion" refers to the decaying flesh of dead animals, which can attract scavengers and play a vital role in ecosystems as a source of nutrients. The term is often used in the context of scavengers feeding on dead animals in the wild.
The abstract use for the noun heart is a word for the vital center and source of one's being, emotions, and sensibilities; capacity for sympathy or generosity; compassion; courage; resolution; fortitude; the most important or essential part of something. The abstract use for the noun heart doesn't do anything, it is something that is.
The noun 'nation' is an abstract noun; a word for an aggregate group of people that are linked by ancestry, history, or culture. The noun 'nation' is a concrete noun as a word for a country. A related abstract noun form is nationality.