The word 'charged' is not a noun.
The word 'charged' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to charge.
The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.
Examples:
I charged only the amount that I can pay off on payday. (verb)
You need to change these for some chargedbatteries. (adjective)
The word charge is both a noun (charge, charges) and a verb (charge, charges, charging, charged).
The noun 'charge' is a singular, common noun.
The noun 'charge' is a concrete noun as a word for the amount of electricity, fuel, or ammunition required.
The noun 'charge' is an abstract noun as a word for the price of a transaction; a purchase made on credit; a claim of wrongdoing, an accusation;
No, the word 'charged' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to charge. The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective (a charged battery, charged purchases).The noun forms of the verb to charge are charge, charger, and the gerund, charging.
Yes, the word 'electricity' is a noun; a common noun, concrete, uncountable noun. The noun electricity is a word for a form of energy resulting from the existence of charged particles; a word for a thing.
A charged body is a body that was fully charged that can either positively or negatively charged.
when a negatvely charged object touches a neutrally charged object electrons move to the neutraly charged object making it negativly charged!
No, its negatively charged.
Charged is a verb. It is the past tense of the verb to charge.
No, the word 'charged' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to charge. The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective (a charged battery, charged purchases).The noun forms of the verb to charge are charge, charger, and the gerund, charging.
Yes, the word 'electricity' is a noun; a common noun, concrete, uncountable noun. The noun electricity is a word for a form of energy resulting from the existence of charged particles; a word for a thing.
The word 'charged' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to charge (charges, charging, charged). The past participle of the verb is also an adjective, used to describe a noun (a charged battery, a chargedquestion).
Yes, the noun 'cost' is a common noun, a general word for the amount of money paid or charged for something; a general word for the loss or penalty involved in achieving something.The word 'cost' is also a verb: cost, costs, costing.
The word 'admission' is a noun, a singular, common, abstract noun; a word for permission to enter or the right, authority to enter; the price charged for entrance; a confession, as of a crime or a mistake; an acknowledgment of the truth or validity of something.The related verb is to admit.
The abstract noun form for the verb to accuse is the gerund accusing.The noun accusation is a related abstract noun form.
A charged atom is an ion. A positively charged version is a cation and a negatively charged one, an anion.
A charged body is a body that was fully charged that can either positively or negatively charged.
no they are not charged.
Correct: He was charged with murder.
You dont get charged for talking but you get charged for backgrounds i think you get charged for emotions aswell