The noun form of the adjective 'considerate' is considerateness or consideration.
No. It is a verb form or adjective, The noun form is consideration, or the gerund form considering.
The word "selfish" is an adjective, used to describe someone who lacks consideration for others. An adverb modifies a verb, adjective, or another adverb, while an adjective describes a noun.
Retrospect can be a noun and a verb. Noun: Consideration of past times. Verb: To reflect on.
The verb to consider has a related adjective formed from the past participle, considered. There is a derivative form (considerate) that means "prone to consider others." There is another derivative form (considerable) that has a modern connotation of "substantial" (e.g. considerable wealth).
The abstract noun form of the adjective courteous is courteousness.A related abstract noun form is courtesy.
Adjective: Done consciously and intentionally: "a deliberate attempt to provoke conflict".Verb: Engage in long and careful consideration: "she deliberated over the menu".
Adjective, Definition: prudent: taking into consideration all possible circumstances and consequences before acting.
personal consideration,marketing consideration,production consideration and financial consideration..hope it can help
I think this is either a major typo, or someone starting to learn English in an unnecessarily bottom-up approach. I guess to answer your literal question: "consider" verb - to consider (infinitive) noun - consideration adjective - considerate adverb - considerately
The opposite of the past tense verb thought (assumed) could be "knew" and the adjective could be "known."The opposite noun for thought (consideration) could be action.
Careful thought is consideration.