Yes, the word 'brilliant' is both an adjective and a noun. The noun 'brilliant' is a word for a gem, especially a diamond, cut so as to sparkle; a word for a thing.The noun forms of the adjective brilliant are brilliantness and brilliance.Examples:The princess's crown was adorned with a brilliant. (noun)The brilliantness of the sun hurt my eyes. (noun)The spotlight sparkled from the brilliance of her gown. (noun)You got a brilliant mark on your recent test! (adjective)
An event that happened in our recent ancestry that did not happen in the recent ancestry of chimps was the Industrial Revolution.
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for a male or a female.The noun 'bachelor' is a word for a man who is not and has never been married.The noun for a woman who is not and has never been married is spinster.The word bachelorette is a more recent addition to popular culture, because the word spinster has such negative connotations.
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The noun 'noun' is an abstract noun, a word for a concept.
The abstract noun form of the adjective 'recent' is recentness.
The word 'recent' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun. Adjectives do not have a singular and plural form.Adjectives have a positive, comparative, and superlative form, for example:recent (positive)more recent (comparative)most recent (superlative)
"Newsflash" is not a proper noun; it is a common noun. It refers to a brief news report about a recent event or development.
Yes, "news" is a noun that refers to information about current events or recent happenings.
"Recent" is an adjective. It can be used with a noun like other adjectives.Example:The garden looks good after the rain.The garden looks good after the recent rain.
The noun for a male is a bachelor; the noun for a female is a spinster.The word bachelorette is a more recent addition to popular culture, because the word spinster has such negative connotations.
The plural is successes. As in "recent successes have allowed us to increase your wages".
Collective noun: stringDay of the week: MondayAdverb: veryExample: The recent string of Mondays has seen very dreary weather.
Username is a noun. It is a relatively recent term, since it is a technical term relating to computer use.
The word 'poop' is a noun or a verb, not an adverb.The noun 'poop' is a word for an enclosed raised structure at the stern of a ship; information about something, especially the most recent news; a childish word for excrement.
Yes, the noun 'posse' is a standard collective noun for:a posse of policea posse of sheriffsa posse of turkeysa posse of posersIn recent times I've also heard the term a posse of paparazzi.
The detectives were suspicious of the recent widow's carefree, almost giddy affect.