The noun 'prison' is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a place for long term incarceration of prisoners; a word for a thing.
The noun form of "prison" is "imprisonment."
The word criminal is both an adjective and a noun. Examples: Adjective: His criminal activities finally landed him in prison. Noun: The criminal was sentenced to twenty years in prison.
Yes, "Prison" should be capitalized when referring to specific correctional facilities or the concept of imprisonment as a system.
The convict was sentenced to ten years in prison for robbery.
The word "convict" can function as both a noun and a verb. As a noun, it refers to a person found guilty of a crime. As a verb, it means to declare someone guilty of a crime.
The word "prison" in French is feminine. It is "la prison".
The word jail is already a noun. It can also be a verb.
Out of those four choices, the noun freedom is the abstract noun.An abstract noun is a word for something that can't be experienced by any of the five physical senses; something that can't be seen, heard, smelled, tasted, or touched.The noun 'freedom' is a word for a concept, an idea.
The word criminal is both an adjective and a noun. Examples: Adjective: His criminal activities finally landed him in prison. Noun: The criminal was sentenced to twenty years in prison.
Yes, "prisoner" is a noun. It refers to a person who is held captive or in custody due to committing a crime or for other reasons.
In French, the Bastille Prison is considered feminine, and you would refer to it as "la Bastille."
Yes, "Prison" should be capitalized when referring to specific correctional facilities or the concept of imprisonment as a system.
You use it like the noun (person place or thing) in this case it is a place
The collective nouns for prisoners are a pityof prisoners, a gang of prisoners.
No, the noun "prison" is a concrete noun, referring to a building where people are incarcerated; a word for a physical thing.An abstract noun refers to something you cannot physically see, touch, taste, hear or feel-- an emotion usually, something you can only experience. For example, "beauty" is an abstract noun. You know it when you see it. "Hunger" is another example-- you can feel it, but you cannot put your finger on it nor does it have a color or a shape. Other abstract nouns are hope, faith, love, independence, and corruption.
There is no standard collective noun for a group of wardens. However, collective nouns are an informal part of language, any noun the suits the context of the situation can function as a collective noun; for example a committee of prison wardens, a bivouac of game wardens, a clog of traffic wardens, etc.
The abstract noun form of the verb to imprison is imprisonment.
Escape is both a verb and a noun. Examples: As a verb: The plan is to escape before the boring lecture. As a noun: A daring prison escape was the headline for the day. It can also be an adjective: Houdini was a famous escape artist. I have an escape clause in my contract.