The noun form of close is close (or closing). The result of closing is closure.
The noun form of the adjective close is closeness.
The noun form is infallibility.
The noun form of the adjective 'modest' is modestness.A related noun form is modesty.
The noun form of the adjective 'precise' is preciseness.A related noun form is precision.
The noun form of the adjective 'various' is variousness.A related noun form is variety.
The noun form of the adjective close is closeness.
There is no specific noun form for 'think less''; a close noun is thoughtlessness.
The word familiar is both an adjective and a noun. The noun form is a word for a close friend or associate; the attendant spirit of a which, usually in the form of an animal; or a person who frequents a place. Another noun form is familiarity.
There is no abstract noun form of the concrete noun shoes. A close cousin is the abstract noun 'shoelessness'.
The form corral's is the singular possessive form: Close the corral's gate.The plural form is corrals; the plural possessive is corrals'.
The noun 'identity' is a singular, common, abstract noun; a word for fact of being who or what a person or thing is; a close similarity or affinity; a word for a concept; a word for a thing.
Close - means: very near (close race) or intimate (close friend)Near - means: closely related (near neighbors) or narrow margin ( a near victory)
The abstract noun for the adjective 'close' is closeness.The abstract noun for the verb to 'close' is the gerund, closing.
The noun form for the adjective prosperous is prosperousness.A related noun form is prosperity.
No, the noun 'closer' is concrete noun, a word for a person or a device; a word for something physical.The word 'closer' is also the comparative form of the adjective 'close'.
The word closer a noun form of the verb to close (closes, closing, closed). The word closer is also the comparative form of the adjective close (closer, closest).
Yes, the noun 'waterfall' is a compound noun, a word made of two or more individual words that merge to form a noun with a meaning of its own ('butter' and 'fly').