No it is an adjective, as in "a wooden bench".
Well, honey, you hit the nail on the head! That tall wooden tower is indeed a noun phrase. It consists of the determiner "that", the adjectives "tall" and "wooden", and the noun "tower". So, yes, it's a noun phrase, no ifs, ands, or buts about it.
Wooden is an adjective, and cottage is a noun.
Yes, wooden is an adjective, a word that describes a noun. Example: a wooden box.
Ball is a noun, wooden is an adjective. A noun is the name of a person, place or thing, an adjective is what describes it. A verb is an action word. For example, in the following sentence:"They played with a wooden ball."Ball is the nounPlayed is the verbWooden is the adjectiveAnother example:"He threw a wooden ball."Threw is a verbWooden is an adjectiveBall is a noun
Ball is a noun, wooden is an adjective. A noun is the name of a person, place or thing, an adjective is what describes it. A verb is an action word. For example, in the following sentence:"They played with a wooden ball."Ball is the nounPlayed is the verbWooden is the adjectiveAnother example:"He threw a wooden ball."Threw is a verbWooden is an adjectiveBall is a noun
No. It is not because it is not a specific noun like America or John.
Is a noun because is a wooden frame that you put a painting on while you paint
Yes, it can be a noun, with several meanings. It can be neckwear, a drawn contest, or a wooden support for a railroad track (crosstie).
To stop short and refuse to go on, or as a noun, A wooden beam or rafter.
Wood can be an adjective. A wood shelf or a woodchair.Also, the word wooden means of or like wood.For wood meaning woods (forests), the adjective would be wooded.
The word 'settle' is an noun as a word for a long wooden bench, often with a compartment under the seat; a word for a thing.The noun forms of the verb to settle are settler, settlement, and the gerund, settling.
Cabinet is a noun (whether it be a wooden cabinet in the kitchen or the President's cabinet)