The word "night" is a noun. There is a verb that sounds like night but is spelled differently-- "knight"-- to knight someone was what a king or queen did to reward the best warriors during the Feudal era. But the word "night" is a noun, and is sometimes used as an adjective. For example: He sometimes have trouble sleeping at night. She loves night time because it's very peaceful.
Yes, the noun 'night' is a count noun. The plural form is nights.
The possessive form of the noun night is night's.Example: Let the night's festivities begin.
The singular possessive form of the noun night is night's.Example: We were exhausted by the night's end.
The singular possessive form of the noun night is night's.Example: We were exhausted by the night's end.
"night" is a noun
The possessive form of the noun dormitory is dormitory's.Example: The dormitory's door is locked at ten every night.
The plural form of the noun lady is ladies.The plural possessive form is ladies'.example: We're planning a ladies' night out.
No, the word 'restless' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun (a restless night, a restless audience).The noun form of the adjective 'restless' is restlessness,.
Night: noun an: adverb adjective: adjective noun: noun adverb: adverb
No, night is a general noun; night is a singular, common, abstract noun.
Well, honey, the word "night" is actually a concrete noun, not an abstract noun. It refers to a specific time of day when the sun goes down and it gets dark outside. So, no need to lose sleep over this one, darlin'.
The word "night" is a common noun.