Eager is an adjective, the noun is eagerness, there is no verb.
It is an abbrevation to remember parts of speech i.e, N= Noun A= Article A= Adverb P= Preposition V= Verb A= Adjective P= Pronoun C= Conjunction I= Interjection
The word 'fish' is a noun, a word for a thing (things).In the example sentence, the noun fish is part of the noun phrase 'catching fish', which is the subject of the sentence.
n. (Abbr. a. or adj.)The part of speech that modifies a noun or other substantive by limiting, qualifying, or specifying and distinguished in English morphologically by one of several suffixes, such as -able, -ous, -er, and -est, or syntactically by position directly preceding a noun or nominal phrase.Any of the words belonging to this part of speech, such as white in the phrase a white house.Taken from WikiAnswers: adjective
verb or noun or adjective ex. (v.) Let's draft a document. ex. (n.) This is the first draft of the document. The ship has a voluminous draft. ex. (adj.) Draft horse are large animals. Draft beer is very bubbly. (original answer)well according to the dictionary and all my friends draft would be a verb.It even kind of sounds like a verb because if you picture draft in your head you picture moving and moving is a verb.So the answer is my folks...........a verb!!!!!!!
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No, the word "broke" is not a noun. It is a verb when used to describe the action of having no money or being in a state of financial difficulty.
The abbreviation "n" in a dictionary typically stands for "noun," indicating that the word it is defining is a noun, which is a person, place, thing, or idea.
The word 'chose' is the past tense of the verb to choose.The noun forms of the verb to choose are chooser or chosen and the gerund, choosing.
The word "gardening" can be used as an adjective, a noun, or a verb. Adjective: I need more gardening tools. Noun: Gardening is my favorite hobby. Verb: I was gardening yesterday. Questions like this can easily be answered by a dictionary. Dictionaries use a lot of abbreviations, so if you are having trouble understanding what your dictionary says, look in the first couple pages for a legend that defines the abbreviations (e.g. "v." means verb, "n." means noun, etc.)
It is a verb, and also an adjective and noun. ex. (v.) Some mushrooms will blue when crushed. ex. (n.) Blue is a nice color. ex. (adj.) Blue flowers are quite rare in nature.
an adjective describes a noun like blue (adj) sky (n); intelligent (adj) person (n); fast (adj) runner (n). If you can say "A" runner, "The" runner, it is a noun. So runner is a person, place or thing - noun.
Copy can be used as either a noun or a verb. n: I have a copy of that paper you wanted. v: Could you copy this for me?
It is an abbrevation to remember parts of speech i.e, N= Noun A= Article A= Adverb P= Preposition V= Verb A= Adjective P= Pronoun C= Conjunction I= Interjection
Kiss:- [noun. singular] nụ hôn- [noun, plural] những nụ hôn- [verb] hôn
Today is an adverb when it describes "when". I will go home today. Today modifies the verb "go" by telling "when" you go. Another opinion: Today is a noun, not an adverb, nor an adjective. What it counts is its primary function in a sentence, not depending on how it is used. According to Babylon, today is : today n. current day. An adverb modifies a verb, and an adjective qualifies a noun. Today is always today anytime of the current day, so it is always a noun.
Noun: teletransportación Verb: teletransportar
A participle is a form of a verb that can function as an adjective. A present participle ends in "-ing" (e.g. running), while a past participle can end in "-ed," "-en," "-d," "-t," "-n," or "-ne" (e.g. walked, eaten). A gerund is a noun form of a verb ending in "-ing" that functions as a noun in a sentence (e.g. Swimming is my favorite hobby).