The word sleuth is a noun. It is another word for a detective.
Sleuth is a noun.
You pronounce "sleuth" like "sl-u-th".
The part of speech for this particular word is a noun.
the part of speech sashay is a averb
Did is a verb, and not is an adverb. Didn't is not any part of speech. It's a contraction of did and not.
No, but it's part of a noun which the noun is the part of speech.
**The word is sleuth. It is not sluthe or any other spelling.**To sleuth (sleuth = verb) means to track or follow something.A sleuth (sleuth = noun) is a detective. [Nancy Drew is often referred to as a 'teen sleuth'.]A sleuth (sleuth = noun) is a group of bears.A sleuth hound (sleuth hound = noun) is a blood hound. [The term sleuth hound derives from verb form.]
**The word is sleuth. It is not sluthe or any other spelling.**To sleuth (sleuth = verb) means to track or follow something.A sleuth (sleuth = noun) is a detective. [Nancy Drew is often referred to as a 'teen sleuth'.]A sleuth (sleuth = noun) is a group of bears.A sleuth hound (sleuth hound = noun) is a blood hound. [The term sleuth hound derives from verb form.]
Yes, the word sleuth is both a verb (sleuth, sleuths, sleuthing, sleuthed) and a noun (sleuth, sleuths). The noun sleuth is a synonym for the noun detective.
The opposite of sleuth would be the term "layperson" or "non-detective."
Seymour sleuth is a wombat detective in fantasy stories.
You pronounce "sleuth" like "sl-u-th".
She wants to be a sleuth when she grows up. The young sleuth suffered from a bullet through the leg. Many attended the sleuth's burial in showing their appreciation for he cracked several difficult cases.
part of speech
The part of speech for this particular word is a noun.
A sleuth is a detective who follows a clue or a sleuth-hound that follows a scent.
what part of speech is beneath
what part of speech is work