Yes, coal is a noun, a common, concrete noun; coal is a word for a substance, a thing.
It depends upon the situation. For there are two known equivalents in ancient, classical Latin for the English word 'coal'. A piece of coal is a piece of glowing carbon, or of charred wood. The Latin word pruna refers to the live coal, and the word carbo to burning or burned wood.
Ember
coal
Coal is a fuel that many people use to keep their homes warm.
Charbon means coal in French.
"thistle" is "chardon" in French. Not to be confused with "charbon", coal.
The English collier (coal miner, pitman) is translated 'mineur' in French. The collier (ship for carrying coal) is 'un minéralier' in French. The French word 'collier' is translated 'necklace' in English.
The coal miner mines coal from the coal mine.
You would have a coal fire, it is a type of coal
Soot is another word for coal dust.
Coal is hiili in Finnish.
Yes, coal is a noun, a common, concrete noun; coal is a word for a substance, a thing.
Yes, the word 'coal' is a noun, a word for a form of the mineral carbon that is broken into pieces suitable for use as fuel; a word for a thing.
It depends upon the situation. For there are two known equivalents in ancient, classical Latin for the English word 'coal'. A piece of coal is a piece of glowing carbon, or of charred wood. The Latin word pruna refers to the live coal, and the word carbo to burning or burned wood.
Khoyla.
Ember