The verbal form of starvation would be starve or starving.
Example:
I am starving!
"Starvation" is a noun-- an abstract noun. It comes from the verb "to starve."
The verbal form of starvation would be starve or starving.Example:I am starving!
The noun forms for the verb to starve are starvation and the gerund, starving.
The root word for "starvation" is "starve," which comes from the Old English word "steorfan" meaning "to die."
There is no abstract noun form of the verb to starve.The noun forms of the verb to starve are starvation and the gerund, starving. Both are concrete nouns as a word for a measurable, physical process.The nouns 'starvation' and 'starving' can be used in an abstract context; for example:His starvation for affection led him to do foolish things.
The word 'starvation' is a noun; a word for the suffering or death caused by hunger.A noun functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.Examples:Starvation is caused by natural disaster or man-made disaster. (subject of the sentence)The physical damage that starvation causes can take years to overcome. (subject of the relative clause)China's 'Great Leap Forward' caused the starvation of many people. (object of the verb 'caused')Many people in Jamestown died of starvation. (object of the preposition 'of')
The Kind subdued the peasants from cultivation, leading to starvation.
Due to severe starvation, Molly was arrested after being caught opening a can of tomatoes in the grocery store.
That is the correct spelling of the word "starvation" (suffering from lack of food).
There are a lot of abstract nouns, which you know very well. But, at the right time you forget. Starve is one of them. Abstract noun of starve is starvation. You can also check the complete article about noun on syllabusfy.in.
The word 'starving' is the present participle for the verb 'to starve', which is the gerund (verbal noun) starving, an abstract noun. Another abstract noun is starvation.
You have to eat to get out of starvation mode.