Stock.
The noun 'stock' is singular, a word for one stock.The plural noun is stocks.Note: the noun 'stock' is an uncountable (mass) noun as a word for goods or merchandise kept at a shop or warehouse.The word 'stock' is also a verb and an adjective.
It depends on how you are using the word, "stock". If stock is referring to an action, then you can say "Stock the shelves". If "stock" is used as a noun, then you can say, "This stock of printing paper needs to be moved".
I am trying to stock my larder in a certain manner.As a verb, as a noun, or as an adjective, stock is a good word to know.See link:
Yes it is. It has the words "live" and "stock" or the words "lives" and "tock".
The word 'fund' is a noun as a word for a sum of money saved or made available for a particular purpose; a financial resource; a large stock or supply of something; a word for a thing.The noun form of the verb to fund is the gerund, funding.
The compound noun New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) is a concrete noun as a word for a physical location (a business, a building).
The word stock has many different definitions. As a noun stock is defined as the goods or merchandise kept by a business for sale or distribution or as the capitol raised by a business through shares.
Yes, the word 'supplies' is the plural form of the singular noun 'supply', a common, abstract noun; a word for an amount or quantity of something that is available to use.The word 'supplies' is also the third person, singular, present of the verb to supply.
The term 'over the counter' is a prepositional phrase(the noun 'counter' is object of the preposition 'over').This prepositional phrase often functions as an adjectiveused to describe a drug available without a doctor's prescription or stocks traded outside a formal stock exchange.Informally, this phrase is sometimes used as a noun as a word for the drug or the stock; as a word for the thing itself.
Yes, the word 'raiders' is a noun, the plural form of the singular noun 'raider', a word for someone who attacks within an enemy's territory; a marauder; someone who enters a place in order to steal; someone who tries to take control of a business by buying a lot of its stock; a word for a person.
Yes, the word 'noun' is a noun, a word for a thing.
Yes, the word 'noun' is a noun, a word for a thing.