If it is just one kind of paint then its like the word water, no plural just a measurement or unit (5 gallons of water, 3 buckets of paint). If it is different KINDS of paint (different colors or types of paints like latex as opposed to oil) the plural is paints ("I brought my paints with me for art class")
Paint can be used as both a countable and uncountable noun. when it is used as a countable noun then the plural is paints, e.g. ICI produces different paints for different applications; the artist uses a variety of paints in his artwork
The word 'paint' is both a verb and a noun.
The noun 'paint' is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a colored substance that is spread over a surface to dry leaving a thin decorative or protective coating; a word for a piebald horse; a word for a thing.
The noun forms of the verb to paint are painter and the gerund, painting.
The word 'paint' is both a noun (paint, paints) and a verb (paint, paints, painting, painted).
The noun 'paint' is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a colored substance that is spread over a surface and dries to leave a thin decorative or protective coating; a type of North American horse.
The plural of ' painting ' is ' paintings. '
Painter
The word painter has no prefix. It has one suffix which is the -er.
Prefixes and suffixes in like a name like a person
designing,designable,designation..
varied, variably, varying
First off, you do know that suffixes are word parts that you add to the end of a word to change its meaning...? So, if you are looking for suffixes for 'passenger' there is none.
worshipped. worshipping.
a prefixes is a group of letters that are fixed to the front of the root word. A suffixes is the main word for example dislike. dis is the prefixes and like is the suffixes
The word painter has no prefix. It has one suffix which is the -er.
hymnal
Prefixes and suffixes in like a name like a person
designing,designable,designation..
varied, variably, varying
You can add "-er" to form the word "viewer," denoting a person who watches or observes something. Another common suffix is "-s," used to form the plural "views" or indicate possession, as in "view's perspective."
You could have : Threatened, Threatning, threated(if thats actually a word)Hope this helps :)
No, word roots and base words are not the same. Word roots are the foundation of a word's meaning and cannot stand alone as a complete word, while base words are words in their simplest form that can stand alone. Base words can have prefixes or suffixes attached to them to create new words.
no
a suffix that you add to the end of a word e.g:confuse-->confusion, express-->expression