The word fascinated is not a noun; fascinated is the past participle, past tense of the verb to fascinate (fascinates, fascinating, fascinated). The past participle is also an adjective (The fascinated audience didn't make a sound.)
The noun forms for the verb to fascinate are fascinator and the gerund (verbal noun) fascinating.
Another noun form is fascination.
The noun 'kind' is an abstract noun. There is no form for kind that is a concrete noun.
What are you fascinated by?I'm fascinated by a lot of thing.
The noun 'kind' is an abstact noun as a word for a type or class. The abstract noun form of the adjective "kind" is "kindness".
The word 'kind' is both an adjective and a noun. The noun kind, a singular, common, abstract noun is a word for a group of individuals or instances sharing common traits; a category.The noun forms for the adjective kind are kindness and kindliness.
The word "fascinating" is actually an adjective, not an abstract noun. It describes something that captures interest or attention. An example of an abstract noun related to this adjective would be "fascination," which refers to the state of being fascinated.
It's no kind of noun it is an adjective. The noun is ravenousness.
The the noun 'kind' is an abstract noun as a word for type or class; having similar characteristics.The abstract noun for kind is kindness.
The idea of him dying is what fascinated him.
... fascinated is good
Fascinated was created in 1987.
The word fascinating is the present participle, present tense of the verb to fascinate.The abstract noun forms for the verb to fascinate are fascination and the gerund, fascinating.
The noun "sugar" is a common noun.