They're called mercenaries.
Yes, the word 'fighter' is a noun, a word for someone or something that fights; a word for a type of military aircraft; a word for a person or thing.
The word 'fights' would be a noun since 'are' would be the verb
The noun 'battler' is a commongender noun, a word for a male or a female a person who battles or fights.
There is only 1 syllable in "fights."
The noun money is a word for a thing.
Yes, the noun 'fight' is a common noun, a general word for any verbal, emotional, or physical confrontation or struggle.The word 'fight' is also a verb: fight, fights, fighting, fought.
Urias: noun: an Israelite army officer, a word for a person.
poor
rich
The word 'fights' is both a noun (fight, fights) and a verb (fight, fights, fighting, fought).The noun 'fights' can function as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.The verb 'fights' can function as a transitive or an intransitive verb.Examples:Their fights are always about money. (noun, subject of the sentence)Those brothers start fights over anything. (noun, direct object of the verb 'start')Jackson fights Johnson in the next match. (verb, transitive; direct object of the verb is 'Johnson')Jackson always fights to win. (verb, intransitive)
umm... a 'RICH' person..... the word is RICH
By definition a mercenary is a person whom fights for a foreign army (one not belonging to the country they are a citizen of), simply for their own pleasure, political ideals, or for payment. Therefore, a logical sentence using the word "mercenary" could be - The British hired Hessian mercenaries to help them fight the colonists during the American Revolution.