The word 'confusing' is the present participle of the verb to confuse (confuses, confusing, confused).
The noun form for the verb to confuse are confusability, confusion, and the gerund (present participle of the verb), confusing.
To change confuse from a verb to a noun, you would use the gerund form of the verb, which acts as a noun. In this case, the gerund form of confuse is confusing. For example, "The confusing of the information led to misunderstandings."
The abstract noun forms of the verb to confuse are confusion and the gerund, confusing.
Confuse is a verb.
The word "labyrinth" can function as both a noun and a verb. As a noun, it refers to a complex maze or a confusing network of paths. As a verb, it means to navigate through a confusing or complex situation.
The word "many" is an adjective. It is confusing i know.
The abstract noun forms of the verb to confuse are confusion and the gerund, confusing.
Yes it is a noun ( a person, place or thing). It's not physical which might make it confusing.
The abstract noun forms of the verb to confuse are confusion and the gerund, confusing.
The proper noun Statue of Liberty is a concretenoun, a word for a physical thing.It can be confusing because the word liberty is an abstract noun; but in this use, it is part of the whole name for something concrete, the statue.
A hyphen is used to separate a prefix from a proper noun or adjective, especially when the combination could be confusing or misleading without it.
No, it is not. It is a noun, a language term for speech that is deliberately ambiguous, confusing, or evasive. Sometimes the term is extended to euphemisms (or "spin").
The word 'act' is both a verb and a noun; for example: Verb: You shouldn't act so gleeful, your gain is someone's loss. Noun: The first act was confusing but the second act pulled the plot together. Some other noun forms are action and activity.