Discussion is the abstract noun
No, "decided" is not a noun. It is the past participle of the verb "decide," which means to make a choice or come to a conclusion. In this form, it is often used as an adjective to describe something that has been determined or settled.
Decision
decided is a verb because it is an action if it were a noun it would be a person place or thing. done by a nine year old bye!
A noun clause can function in a sentence as a noun; the subject of the sentence, and the object of a verb or a preposition.Subject: Whatever the cafeteria staff has decided to cookis on the menu board.Object of verb: The menu board tells whatever the cafeteria staff has decided to cook.Object of preposition: Check the menu board forwhatever the cafeteria staff has decided to cook.
The singular noun is ride.
A collective noun is a noun used to group words for people or things in a descriptive or colorful way. Words for people or things are nouns (a flock of tourists, a bouquet of flowers).The word 'decided' is a verb, the past tense of the verb to decide. Collective nouns do not group verbs.
A collective noun is a noun used to group words for people or things in a descriptive or colorful way. Words for people or things are nouns (a flock of tourists, a bouquet of flowers).The word 'decided' is a verb, the past tense of the verb to decide. Collective nouns do not group verbs.
The word is spelled decide.The word decide is a verb (decide, decides, deciding, decided), meaning to make a decision (noun).
The word 'decide' is not a noun, it's a verb (decide, decides, deciding, decided). The abstract noun forms for the verb to decide are decidability, and the gerund, deciding. Another abstract noun form is decision.
Noun
Both. As a noun: "He loved bacon, but mindful of his cholesterol, he had only one strip."As a verb: "He decided to strip the table before restaining it".
No, the word 'decided' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to decide. The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.Example:The committee has decided on the funding for the playground. (verb)Now we move from the decided issue to the supplier bids. (adjective)A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.Example: The playground really needs to be safe, it needs an update. (the pronoun 'it' takes the place of the noun 'playground' in the second part of the sentence)