Air.
Air is a common, concrete noun.
Air is a common, concrete noun.
Air raids is a noun.
The simple noun in the phrase "floating in air" is "air."
The air temperature is a noun because it is a thing.
The noun 'air' is an common, uncountable, concrete noun as a word for the gaseous substance that surrounds the earth.The noun 'air' is a common, singular, abstract noun as a word for an impression of a quality or manner given by someone or something.The word 'air' is also a verb: air, airs, airing, aired.
The noun 'air' is an common, uncountable, concrete noun as a word for the gaseous substance that surrounds the earth.The noun 'air' is a common, singular, abstract noun as a word for an impression of a quality or manner given by someone or something.The word 'air' is also a verb: air, airs, airing, aired.
The noun 'air' is a concrete noun, a word for a physical compound; a word for something that can be measured with instruments.
Air is a concrete noun. Air is concrete because it is made up of molecules that can be seen, weighed, measured by scientific means even if you can't see it with the naked eye. The noun air is a material noun, a word for something that other things are made from. Air is an important ingredient in combustion, baking, insulation, concrete formulas, and many other things.
The noun 'air' is a concrete noun, a word for a physical substance made up of measurable molecules. The noun 'air' can be used in an abstract context, for example: "He's full of hot air." (empty, exaggerated talk)
Air is a common noun. It is not the name of a person, place, festival, day, month, or any of the other types of proper noun.
No, air is a noun.