A bare noun is a noun that is not preceded by a qualifier (an article, an adjective, a determiner, a pronoun, an attributive noun). A bare noun is most often a plural noun or a singular mass (uncountable) noun.
Examples:
In the morning I can hear birds chirping.
We play football after school.
I came home with sand in my shoes.
I bought cheese and tomatoes to make sandwiches.
A bare noun is a linguistic term for a noun used without any qualifier or determiner to modify it.
I'm walking in the sand with my bare feetMy body is bare i have no protection
Bare Wires was created on 1968-06-21.
The bear used his bare feet to walk .
The pioneer stage of succession is the one with a bare bottom.
The synonyms depend on how the word is used in context. The adjective bare (uncovered) can have the synonyms naked, exposed, undressed or unclad. The adjective bare (having no addition) can have the synonyms blank, bleak, barren, empty, destitute, or devoid. The verb bare (to expose) has the synonyms reveal, divulge, or uncover.
The abstract noun form of the verb to bare is the gerund, baring. The noun form of the adjective bare is bareness, a concrete noun, a word for a physical condition.
The noun is bareness. The noun for the act (making bare) would be the gerund form, baring (usually meaning uncovering or revealing).
'Bear Mountain' is a proper noun, the name of a mountain. (there are several places called Bare Mountain, one in Massachusetts) In the sentence "I knew that the bare mountain would be covered with snow when winter came", the word 'bare' is an adjective. -------- 'Bare', as in Bare Mountain is an adjective; 'Mountain' is a noun. There are several mountains known adjectivally as Bare. Modest Mussorgsky wrote the tone poem titled 'Night on Bald Mountain', later arranged by Nicholas Rimsky-Korsakoff as a fantasy for orchestra, now known more usually as 'Night on Bare Mountain', and Leopold Stokowski based his version, for the Disney feature 'Fantasia' on this. The bare, or bald, mountain of the title is the Lysa Hora in the Ukraine, a large hill which was then bare of trees on top.
Yes, a homophone is a noun. It refers to a word that sounds the same as another word but has a different meaning or spelling.
Yes, the word seed is both a verb (seed, seeds, seeding, seeded) and a noun (seed, seeds). Examples: Verb: We need to seed the bare spots in the lawn. Noun: Each avocado contains one large seed.
bare
The forms of the verb to 'bear' are bears, bearing, bore, born (or borne).The plural form of the singular noun 'bear' is bears.
Well bare foot is "barefoot" with no spaces in. Bare feet is alright. we normally use barefoot as in " Can i go barefoot". Bare feet is "PE is done in bare feet"
There are many products available from Bare Essentials Bare Minerals. The main products produced by Bare Essentials Bare Minerals would be skin creams and skin lotions.
No, crossed is the past tense of the verb 'to cross' or and adjective, a word that describes a noun. Example uses:Verb: We carried our shoes and crossed the stream in our bare feet.Adjective: The symbol of crossed swords has been used for centuries.
Bare is an anagram.
No, "bear" and "bare" are not homophones. "Bear" refers to the animal, while "bare" means uncovered or naked.