The noun 'sister' is a common noun because it refers to a general type of relationship and does not require capitalization.
No, "jewelry" is a common noun and does not require capitalization unless it is the first word in a sentence or part of a title.
Yes, "oratory" is a common noun. It refers to the art of public speaking and does not require capitalization unless used at the beginning of a sentence.
Yes, "weekend" is not typically hyphenated as it is considered a compound noun that does not require a hyphen.
No, the word "iceberg" is a common noun, as it refers to a general type of large floating mass of ice. It is not a specific or unique entity that would require capitalization as a proper noun.
The noun form for the verb to require is requirer, that which requires. Another noun form is requirement.
The noun forms of the verb 'require' are requirement and the gerund, requiring.
The abstract noun forms for the verb to require are requirement and the gerund, requiring.
The noun 'requirement' is an abstract noun, a word for a necessity, an obligation, a prerequisite; a word for a concept.
Album is a common noun. In normal cases, it does not require capitalization.
A common noun is any noun that does not require an upper case first letter. They are in distinction to proper nouns which do require the first letter to be upper case.
No. Longitude is a common noun and does not require capitalization.
Sweat is a mass noun, and does not require pluralisation.
"Required" could be a verb or an adjective. For instance, to use it as a verb, you could say, "You required him to clean his room." To use it as an adjective, you could say, "This is a required test."
Yes, "mid-term exams" is a noun. It refers to a set of tests or assessments typically taken by students in the middle of an academic term.
No. E-mail is a common noun, so it does not require a capital letter.
The word 'requires' is a verb; the third person, singular, present of the verb to require.The noun forms for the verb to require are requirer, requirement, and the gerund, requiring.The adjective form for the verb to require is the past participle, required (a required document).