No. Thin is an adjective. Thinly is an adverb
Simple.............yar the cylinder that is thin :)
Jon Krakauer wrote Into Thin Air.
The size of the object casting the shadow..? Thin object = thin shadow Fat object = fat shadow
thick is very good thin is very good thick is not good thin is not good thick isn't good thin isn't goof dr, amjad
No, "thin" is not a noun. It is an adjective used to describe something or someone as having a small distance between opposite sides.
She is as thin as a "whisper."
There is no abstract noun form of the adjective 'thick'.The noun form of the adjective 'thick' is thickness, a concrete noun, a word for a physical property, a physical density.The noun 'thickness' can be used in an abstract context, for example:A thickness of anticipation could be felt throughout the audience.
A collective noun is the name given to a group of persons animal or thin.
Yes, it is a noun. It can refer to a thin layer of material, or more specifically a bedsheet.
A noun is a name of a person animal place or thing
No, it is a noun. An antelope is a thin bovine animal related to deer. Used with other nouns (antelope horn), it is a noun adjunct.
Noun: not fat; slender; in short supply Verb: to reduce in number
No, it is not. Filament is a noun meaning 1) a thin stalk in plant reproductive organs, or 2) a thin wire as is found in incandescent light bulbs.
lunch (noun) = el almuerzo (ell alMWAIRthaw) ('th' as in 'thin') to lunch (verb) = almorzar (almorrTHARR) ('TH' as in 'thin')
Yes, the word 'bubble' is a noun, a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a thin sphere of liquid enclosing air or another gas; a word for a thing.
If you are referring to a dry, possibly hard, thin baked cake it is a noun. It can be an adjective as in 'having a biscuit colour'