A tangible object is a physical thing, a thing that can be experienced by any of the five senses, it can be seen, heard, smelled, tasted, or touched. A concrete noun is a word for a physical thing.
Car, Laptop, furniture, book,
A word for a tangible object is a concrete noun.
Examples of objects not sharp:knifescissorsrazorsawExample of objects not shiny:concretewoolslatebrickExamples of objects not interesting:billsmanualsassembly instructionsgrocery lists
This word is a noun-- the name of something or someone. The plural is acquaintances. Sometimes it's an abstract and sometimes tangible. Examples: "I do not have the pleasure of her acquaintance" (abstract); "Let me introduce to you my acquaintance, Mr. Rumpelstiltskin" (tangible).
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"The city received no tangible benefit from the expensive program.""Tangible items can be touched.""After I hadn't had food for three days the fruit looked so tangible that I almost cried."
A word for a tangible object is a concrete noun.
"Tangible things" is a broad term. Tangible items are objects that can be physically felt or moved. Tangible materials are physical objects that can be shaped and arranged to create garments. It is my assumption that tangible items in fashion are items that you add to your design that would not traditionally be used to create garments.
If something is tangible it means you can touch it. Everything at McDonald's would be considered tangible because you can physically touch the objects in the restaurant.
Not exactly, but heat in objects that you can touch is tangible. Radiant heat might be said to be tangible, as well.
Tangible
Yachts and yardsticks are tangible objects.
An abstract concept is a broad idea or thought that is not tangible or concrete, often stemming from thoughts, feelings, or philosophical notions rather than physical objects. Examples include love, justice, and beauty.
Tangible objects that start with the letter j:jacketjeansjerseyjewelryjackknifejavelinjawbonejellybeanjug
Tangible
Yes, matter makes up all tangible objects.
tangible
No. Logic deals with statements or values or reasoning, none of which are tangible objects or forces.