The noun form of the adjective 'polite' is politeness.
The abstract noun form of the adjective 'polite' is politeness.
No, polite is an adjective. 'Politeness' is the noun form; 'politeness' is an abstract noun.
No, the word 'political' is an adjective, a word that describes a noun as of or relating to the government or public affairs, for example, a political party, a political speech.The related noun form is politics.
The word polite is an adjective. Adjectives don't have singular or plural, they have degrees, for example:polite, more polite, most polite.The noun form for the adjective polite is politeness; the plural form is politenesses.
The word 'hungriness' is the noun form of the adjective hungry.The word 'hungry' is the adjective form of the noun 'hunger'.
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' 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.
respectable
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 abstract noun form of the adjective correct is correctness.The abstract noun forms of the verb to correct is correction and the gerund, correcting.
The word 'princely' is not a noun. The word princely is an adjective, a word to describe a noun, for example a princelysum (a lot of money) or a princely manner (very polite).The abstract noun form for the adjective princely is princeliness. Another noun form is prince.
The noun form of the word "polite" is "politeness".