The number 79 is the noun seventy nine.
nouns
English does not have feminine or masculine nouns. In Spanish, it is feminine.
The word "fly" is a common noun. In English nouns, common, non-gender specific nouns are neutral. They take neither gender.
Ell, eon, lye, one, yell, and yen are six nouns which can be found in the English adjective "lonely."
Neither. English nouns do not have grammatical gender.
yes
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female. There is no word in English spelled 'portess'.
It's the adjective 'blue', for plural nouns
Yes, the noun 'English' is a concrete noun as a word for the people of England as a whole; a word for the written and spoken language of England; a word for physical people or a physical thing.The word 'English' is also an adjective.
The types of nouns in English are:commonpropersingularpluralpossessivecollectiveconcreteabstract
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.The noun turtle is a common gender noun, a word for a male or a female animal. There are no gender nouns for a male or female turtle.
It is not a compound word. Although MESS and AGE are English nouns/verbs, they cannot combine together. It is not possible.