The noun form for the adjective nervous is nervousness.
Anxiety, apprehension, unease.
The word nervous is an adjective. It means to be apprehensive or anxious.
A synonym of nervous is: apprehensive An antonym of nervous is: serene There is no homonym of nervous. A homonym is a word that is spelled differently and may have a different meaning, but sounds the same...such as principal and principle.
Polio is a noun. If you want to use polio with a verb, you could say: Contract polio Suffer from polio Die of polio Recover from polio Etc., etc. I hope that helped.
The noun form of the verb "noun" is "noun-ness" or "nominalization."
The root word for "nervous" is "nerve," which comes from the Latin word "nervus" meaning sinew or tendon.
The noun form for the adjective nervous is nervousness.
No, the word 'nervous' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun.The noun form of the adjective 'nervous' is nervousness.The word 'nervous' is the adjective form of the noun nerve.
Yes, the compound noun 'nervous system' is a common noun, a word for any nervous system of anyone or anything.
No nervous is an adjective
The noun form for the adjective nervous is nervousness. Another noun form is nerve.
The abstract noun form of the adjective nervous is nervousness.
nervousness
The adjective is nervous (you are nervous) but the idiomatic phrase uses the plural noun, as "you're getting on my nerves."
The noun 'brain' is a common noun, a general word for any organ of nervous tissue functioning as the coordination center of intellectual, nervous, and motor activity; a general word for an exceptionally intelligent person.
Nerves is a plural noun. Nervous is an adjective.
No, the word nauseous is not a noun. the word nauseous is an adjective.The abstract noun form of the adjective nauseous is nauseousness.
The noun 'perspiration' is a massnoun, a word for liquid that your skin produces when you are hot, ill, or nervous; a word for a substance.The noun 'perspiration' is a concretenoun as a word for a physical substance.