The word 'patients' is a noun, the plural form of the singular noun 'patient'; a word for an individual awaiting or under medical care; a word for a person.
The singular form 'patient' is also an adjective, a word that describes a noun as bearing inconvenience, annoyance, or misfortune with a calm demeanor.
The word patience is a noun form, a word for the ability to accept or tolerate inconvenience, annoyance, or misfortune without getting angry or upset.
The collective noun for patients is a virtue of patients.
The homophone for the plural noun 'patients' is the uncountable abstract noun patience.
The possessive form of patients is patients'.
No, the noun 'patient' is the singular form.The plural noun is patients.
The word patients' is plural possessive for the singular noun patient.
Yes, "patients."
The abstract noun form for the adjective patient is patience.
Patients
British, American, or Canadian, the word hospital can be a collective noun for patients.
The compound noun in the sentence "The doctor's waiting room is always crowded with patients" is "waiting room." It combines the two words "waiting" and "room" to refer to a specific type of room designated for patients to wait in.
The plural form of the noun patient is patients.The plural possessive form is patients'.Examples: The patients' waiting room is full.
Waiting room is the compound noun in the question. The compound noun is waiting room.A compound noun is a noun made up of two or more words that form a noun with a meaning of its own.