The noun forms of the verb "qualify" are qualifier, qualification, and the gerund, qualifying.
A qualification is an accomplishment or quality that makes a person suitable, eligible, or worthy of a particular job, activity, or duty.
To qualify means you put it in a category. to quantify means to count it.
The word 'qualified' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to qualify. The past participle also functions as an adjective. The abstract noun form of the verb to qualify is qualification.
Yes, a proper noun or proper name is a noun representing a unique entity as distinguished from a common noun, which represents a class of entities (or nonunique instance[s] of that class)-for example, city, planet, person or corporation). Since Dr. Kim is apparently the name of a specific person, it would qualify as a proper noun.
There is no collective noun in the example sentence. A collective noun is a function of a noun, not a characteristic inherent in a noun; for example:On Sundays, a family of writers eats in the dining room.
No, the word 'windy' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun.The noun form of the adjective 'windy' is windiness.The word 'windy' is the adjective form of the noun wind.
The -- article. Articles specify the grammatical "definiteness" of the noun, i.e., "the" is more specific than "a" or "an. "The" refers to a specific item, "a" and "an" refer to any item of the kind.mail carrier -- a compound noun (comprised of an adjective "mail" and a noun "carrier")new -- adjective (modifies / describes the noun "carrier" in the compound noun)........NOTE: some might define carrier as the noun, with mail as........an adjective, describing it. In that case new is still an adjective........which modifies (describes) the nouncarrier.................If "new" modified the adjective "mail" it would be an adverb (one of an........adverbs many functions). But -- the sentence then would mean that the........carrier only delivers "New mail," versus delivering new mail, junk mail........and old (returned) mail.finally -- adverb (qualifies/expands on the verb (arrived). *See note below about adverbs:arrived -- verb intransitive (a 'being' verb versus an 'action' / transitive verb)*NOTE: Adverbs qualify by answering questions like: how?, in what way?, when?, where?, and to what degree? Adverbs often end in "ly".Adverbs not only qualify verbs. They similarly qualify adjectives, other adverbs, and can even qualify /"introduce" phrases and sentences.Please refer to the related link listed below for more information on adverbs.(My login -- Joyluck -- didn't "take" when I added this answer. Supervisor: How do I add my login to the answer?)
The noun forms for the verb to qualify are the gerund, qualifying, and qualification.
No.
a conjunction
noun: Indoor plumbing is a requisite for most home buyers.adjective: I have the requisitecourses to qualify for the grant.
The word 'qualified' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to qualify. The past participle also functions as an adjective. The abstract noun form of the verb to qualify is qualification.
The word 'open' is a noun as a word for an area that is not enclosed; a word for a competition with no restrictions on who may qualify to compete; a word for a thing.The noun forms of the verb 'open' are opener and the gerund, opening.The noun form of the adjective 'open' is openness.
Adjectives enhance the description of a thing. An adjective is a "describing word", the main syntactic role of which is to qualify a noun or noun phrase, giving more information about the object.
No. It is either an abbreviation for ounce, or a proper noun (Land of Oz, Australia, people's names). Therefore it does not qualify.
No. It is either an abbreviation for ounce, or a proper noun (Land of Oz, Australia, people's names). Therefore it does not qualify.
Yes, the word 'if' is a noun, a singular, common, abstract noun; a word for something that is not certain or not decided yet; a word for a stipulation; a word for a thing.The word 'if' is also a conjunction, preceding a noun to qualify that noun as in that situation, preceding a request, preceding a clause giving two or more possibilities.
Loathsome is an adjective - it's used to qualify a noun in a sentence.Eg: He is a loathsome man, who would forsake morality for money.
The word practice (var. practise) is both a noun and a verb; for example:Noun: It takes many years of training to qualify for the practice of medicine.Verb: He must practice every day after school on the days he doesn't go for a piano lesson.