The word 'historic' is the adjective form of the noun history.
The word 'historic' is the adjective form of the noun history.
The word 'historic' is the adjective form of the noun history.
The word 'historic' is not a noun. The word 'historic' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun; for example, historic battle or historiclandmark.A noun is a word for a person, a place, or a thing.A common noun is a general word for a person, a place or a thing (man, city, cookie).A proper noun is the unique names of a person, a place, or a thing (Napoleon, Paris, Oreo).
The proper noun, an historic US city, is Philadelphia.
The noun 'archaeology' is an abstract noun, a word for the study of historic or prehistoric peoples and their cultures; a word for a concept.
The correct spelling of the noun is "museum" (a repository of cultural, artistic, or historic items).
The adjective is historic and the noun base is history.
The proper noun may be spelled McConaughey (actor Matthew) or McConahay (historic building in Kansas City).
Storico is the Italian equivalent of 'history'. It's a masculine gender noun that takes the definite article 'lo' for 'the'. The related word, 'storico', means 'historian' as a noun and 'historic' as an adjective.
Anne Turner Simpson has written: 'Historic St Andrews' -- subject(s): Antiquities 'Historic Peterhead' 'Historic Wick' 'Historic Kilmarnock' 'Historic Kinghorn' 'Historic Lochmaben' 'Historic Auchtermuchty' 'Historic Elgin' 'Historic Inverkeithing' -- subject(s): Antiquities 'Historic Dunbar' 'Historic Renfrew' 'HISTORIC PITTENWEEM' 'Historic Strathaven' 'Historic Kilwinning' 'Historic Edinburgh, Canongate and Leith' 'Historic Lanark' 'Historic North Berwick'
A historic. In addition, the "h" in "historic" is not silent. If it was silent, then the answer would have been "an historic".
Both "an historic" and "a historic" are acceptable, but "a historic" is more commonly used due to the pronunciation of the word "historic" starting with a consonant sound.