The word view is a noun, a singular, common, abstract noun. The word view is also a verb (view, views, viewing, viewed). The present participle of the verb, viewing, is also a noun called a gerund. Example sentences:
Noun: The view from our suite was beautiful; well worth the expense of a suite.
Verb: We can view your edits before your presentation.
Noun: The viewing is scheduled for Saturday morning.
The letters 'ist' is not a word or a pronoun, -ist is a suffix that turns a word for an action into a noun for a person who performs the action such as machine to machinist or piano to pianist.
Yes, view can be a noun or verb.noun: My view is outstanding from the 15th floor.verb: John and I view the problem differently.
The suffix -ist turns the violin into the violinist.
Need more info. In the nominative case (which is likely the case you're using), there are 3 ways to say "the" depending on the noun coming after it. So "is the" could be "ist der..." "ist das..." or "ist die..."
No, the word 'view' is a noun (view, views) and a verb (view, views, viewing, viewed).Examples:Our room had a beautiful view. (noun)We plan to view the exhibit at the museum. (verb)A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.Example: We plan to view the exhibit at the museum. It is open until the end of the week. (the pronoun 'it' takes the place of the noun 'exhibit' in the second sentence)
View can be a noun and a verb. Noun: e.g. the act of looking at something. Verb: e.g. to look at.
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It is a noun used to describe a practitioner of some activity or profession or believer in a some ideology. The root, before the "ist" is the noun defining the profession (artist, physicist) or ideology (Marxist, Buddhist).
"Beautiful" is an adjective, and "view" is a noun.
It can be. It can also be a proper noun and a verb.
I go straight to the point it is a noun. :)
The suffix that could be added to "diary" to form a noun is "-ist," resulting in "diarist." This suffix is used to denote a person who keeps a diary or writes in a diary regularly. Adding the suffix "-ist" changes the word from a common noun to a specific noun referring to someone engaged in the practice of diary writing.