The abstract noun forms of the verb to hate are hatredand the gerund, hating.
The noun 'hate' is an abstract noun as a word for an emotion.
The abstract noun form can be hate or hatred. As nouns they have the same meaning, but hatred is more specifically directed toward or against someone or some concept.
Hatred
Decode is not a noun, it is a verb.
The abstract noun form for the verb to understand is the gerund, understanding.
The abstract noun form of the verb to discuss is discussion.
There is no abstract noun for the verb to laugh. The noun form of the verb to laugh is the gerund, laughing; a concrete noun as a word for a physical act. The noun 'laugh' is a concrete noun as a word for a physical action or sound. The concrete noun 'laugh' can be used in an abstract context. Example: He mistook me for a famous movie star. What a laugh!
Patience is a noun, a common, abstract noun.
The noun 'hate' is an abstract noun, a word for intense or passionate dislike; a word for an emotion.A related abstract noun is hatred.The abstract noun form of the verb to 'hate' is the gerund, hating.The concrete noun form of the verb to 'hate' is hater, a word for a person.
The noun forms of the verb to hate are hatred and the gerund, hating. The word 'hate' is also a noun form; an abstract noun; a word for an emotion.
Yes, the word hate is a noun, a common, singular, abstract noun. Hate is also a verb (hates, hating, hated).
The word 'hate' is an abstract noun, a word for an intense or passionate dislike; a word for an emotion.The abstract noun forms of the verb to hate are hatredand the gerund, hating.Examples:Noun: Hate has a value when it spurs changes for the better.Verb: When you hate broccoli, you should plant carrots.
The word 'wise' is an abstract noun meaning the manner of something, the way or the mode of something.Example: "That's the way it crumbles, cookie wise."The abstract noun for the adjective 'wise' is wiseness.A related abstract noun is wisdom.The abstract noun for the adjective 'free' is freedom.The abstract noun for the verb to 'hate' is hatred.
No, it is not. The word hate can be an abstract noun (hatred) or a verb, where it would have adjectives including hated. In compound terms such as hate crime, hate is a noun adjunct.
Yes, hate is an abstract noun. An abstract noun is something that can't be experienced by any of the five senses; it can't be seen, heard, smelled, tasted, or touched. You may see the face of someone whose angry or hear the words of anger, but the anger itself is what that person is feeling, not their face or their words.The word hate is both a noun (hatred) and a verb (to hate).Noun: Hate has a value when it spurs changes for the better.Verb: Don't hate your enemy; succeed in spite of their hatred.
The word hate is a noun; a common, singular, abstract noun, a word for an intense or passionate dislike; a word for an emotion, a word for a thing.The noun forms of the verb 'to hate' are hater (one who hates), hatred, and the gerund, hating.
The abstract noun form for the verb to please is the gerund, pleasing.A related abstract noun form is pleasure.
The abstract noun 'adoration' is a noun form of the verb to adore.
The word 'departure' is the abstract noun form of the verb to depart.
Resentence is an action verb. There is no abstract noun.