Mississippi 11 letters
No. Longest is a superlative.
Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwlll-lantysiliogogogoch (58 letters) is a town in North Wales. People travel there just to have their picture taken in front of the sign on the train station. Taumatawhakatangihangakoauauotamateapokaiwhenuakitanatahu (57 letters) is the name of a hill in New Zealand; however, the Maori name is usually shortened to Taumata.
Nebuchadnezzar, but it's a proper noun. How about Commandments.
The longest single word is 9 letters: laypeople (the proper noun Halloween is also 9 letters).
The nouns in the sentence are Joe, a proper noun, jump and class, both common nouns.
Yes, "afternoon" is a common noun because it refers to a general time of day rather than a specific one.
The longest common noun in English is:antidisestablishmentarianisma word for a political position in opposition to the withdrawal of state support or recognition from an established church, a word for a thing. There is an even longer common noun that is a scientific word:pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosisa word for a lung disease (more commonly called silicosis) gotten from inhalation of particles of silica or quartz; also a word for a thing.
The longest word you can make from those letters is the word "presage". It means a foreshadowing of things to come, and it can be either a noun or a verb.
The longest word in the dictionary that begins with the letter "f" is "floccinaucinihilipilification." This word is a noun and is defined as the action or habit of estimating something as worthless. It consists of 29 letters and is considered one of the longest non-technical words in the English language.
The anagram is the plural noun "solstices" (calendar days with longest days or nights, which can mark the beginning of summer or winter).
The anagram would be a proper noun (Babels). The longest common words are babes, bales, blabs, blase, and sable.
There is no word 'jamp' in English.The word jump is a noun, as well as a verb; for example:Noun: The longest jump was made by Mike Powell in 1991 at 8.95 m. (29 ft 4½ in.).Verb: I don't think that I can jump that far.