The word 'pandemonium' is a noun; a word for a very noisy and confused situation; a word for a thing.
A noun functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.
Example sentences:
The pandemonium of four kids indoors on a rainy day will try your patience. (subject of the sentence)
There was pandemonium in the street as the stars limo arrived. (direct object of the verb 'was')
I had quite a headache from the pandemonium. (object of the preposition 'from')
your sentence: the PlayStation that I love the most is Pandemonium 2.
The pandemonium of four kids indoors on a rainy day will try your patience.
When the gentlemen at the door yelled Fire, there was pandemonium throughout the theater.
There was a pandemonium in the stadium when the home team won the championship game
The word 'pandemonium' is a noun; a word for a very noisy and confused situation; a word for a thing.A noun functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.Example sentences:The pandemonium of four kids indoors on a rainy day will try your patience. (subject of the sentence)There was pandemonium in the street as the stars limo arrived. (direct object of the verb 'was')I had quite a headache from the pandemonium. (object of the preposition 'from')
Iwas filled with pandemonium. This sentence does not display understanding of the word. One could say one was filled with almost anything. If you were filled with dismay at the pandemonium caused by the charging elephant, that would make more sense.
It is complete pandemonium trying to shop at Macy's on 34th Street the week before Christmas.
Yes, the word 'pandemonium' is a noun, a word for a very noisy and confused situation; a word for a thing. In the sentence, "Pandemonium broke out.", the noun pandemonium is the subject.
When the government announced it was bankrupt, pandemonium broke loose on Wall Street.As soon as the elephant crashed through the door and into the room, pandemonium erupted.
Pandemonium, the high capital of Satan and his peers (John Milton).
The word pandemonium, is a word that comes from two Greek words combined: Pan and Daimonium. Pan means "all" or "every;" and "daimonium" means little creatures or demons. So pandemonium is a place where all the demons are; also it conveys the idea of chaos, as in "all demons are loose here."
You would not (at least if you were writing correct English). The correct spelling of the word is pandemonium."The concert was loud and pandemonium broke out when the lead singer left the stage in the middle of a song."