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Busy can't be a noun, which is a thing. Busy is an adjective, which describes things. "A busy street".
The adjective busy has the abstract noun busyness, which became used as the separate word "business" to refer to occupational and commercial activity.
The word "busy" is an adjective, applied to a noun, pronoun, or name. The adverb form is "busily".
Temperate.
The abstract noun forms of the verb to correct are correction and the gerund, correcting.The abstract noun form of the adjective correct is correctness.
Busy can't be a noun, which is a thing. Busy is an adjective, which describes things. "A busy street".
The adjective busy has the abstract noun busyness, which became used as the separate word "business" to refer to occupational and commercial activity.
No, the word 'busiest' is the superlative form of the adjective busy (busier, busiest).The abstract noun form of the adjective 'busy' is business.
an adjective is where there is a word in front of a noun and it describes. e.g. The dog crossed the busy road. busy is the adjective
The word "busy" is an adjective, applied to a noun, pronoun, or name. The adverb form is "busily".
Business is a noun. It names an occupation.
The word 'correct' is not a noun; correct is a verb (correct, corrects, correcting, corrected) and an adjective (correct, more correct, most correct). The noun form for the verb to correct is corector, correction, and the gerund, correcting. The noun form for the adjective correct is correctness.
The noun form of the adjective 'polite' is politeness.
Temperate.
The abstract noun forms of the verb to correct are correction and the gerund, correcting.The abstract noun form of the adjective correct is correctness.
The word "correct" may be an adjective, a noun, or a verb, dependingh on how it is used.
The abstract noun forms of the verb to correct are correction and the gerund, correcting.The abstract noun form of the adjective correct is correctness.