I blew a bubble.
Condom
Yes, the word 'bubble' is a noun, a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a thin sphere of liquid enclosing air or another gas; a word for a thing.
on the bubble
Yes, the compound noun 'bubble gum' is a common noun, a word for any bubble gum of any kind.A proper noun for bubble gum would be the name of a specific bubble gum, for example Bazooka, Bubblicious, Bubble Yum, etc.
the word rag in a sentence
A sentence with the word 'porcupine' in it is no different from any other sentence, it is just a sentence referring to a porcupine.
Every single bubble will pop eventually.
The soap bubble was iridescent
The adverb form of the word bubble is bubbly.An example sentence is: "She is a very bubbly girl".
bulla is the latin word for bubble
The wind blew down that old tree. He blew out the candles on the cake.
bubble I think because her first word was bubble
the bubble landed on the sleeping dogs nose. the startled child stared in awe when the bubble formed from the end of a stick.
A police patrol car drives down the motorway with a bubble of law abiding motorists surrounding it. I love to chew bubble gum. My mum makes use of yesterdays left over mashed potato and cabbage to make bubble and squeak.
The word 'bubble' is both a verb (bubble, bubbles, bubbling, bubbled) and a noun (bubble, bubbles). The adjective form is bubbly. The word 'bubble gum' is a compound noun, an open spaced compound noun; two words joined to form a noun with its own meaning.
you just did. the bubble landed on the sleeping dogs nose. the startled child stared in awe when the bubble formed from the end of a stick.
In the King James version the word - bubble - does not appear at all. Nor does any form of the word - bubbles, bubbling, bubbled, etc.
the scientist chewed bubble gum :)