Heaviness is the corresponding noun to the adjective heavy.
Heavy (pl. heavies) can also be used as a noun meaning something large or heavy of its kind;(informal) a large, strong man, especially one hired for protection; (informal) an important person, a villain in a play or movie.
The word 'heavy' is a noun as a word for the role of villain in a movie or play; a word for a character; a word for a person.
The noun form of the adjective 'heavy' is heaviness.
none. a root word would be the base of a word...like answering. answer is the root word in answering. useless- use is the root word.
Heavy is already used as a verb in the context of "to be or being heavy".
Otherwise it is an adjective.
An adjective:
The table is heavy. That was a heavy meal.
A noun:
The heavies at the pub kicked us out.
heavily
[object Object]
the answer is ur butt
Yes
Abstract
The common noun for the adjective heavy is heaviness.There is one use of the word heavy as a noun; heavy (a common noun) is the word for the role of villain in a movie or play. Example: With his rough appearance, Mike is always cast as the heavy.
Yes. "Heavy" is an adjective, meaning it can describe a noun. Many times, an adjective is used before a noun, such as "beautiful blouse," beautiful being the adjective and blouse the noun. In this case, heavy could be used as an adjective in the sentence: "This heavy bowling ball will cause back pains to the players."
tractor is a common or proper noun or concrete noun or abstract noun
Rains is a verb, the third person singular conjugation of rain. "It rains every afternoon."Rains can also be a plural noun, the rains, which indicates heavy rainfall or the season of heavy rainfall.
The noun 'jack' is a common noun as a word for a device for lifting heavy things, and the face card in a deck of cards. The noun 'Jack' is a proper noun as the name of a person (place, or thing).
The common noun for the adjective heavy is heaviness.There is one use of the word heavy as a noun; heavy (a common noun) is the word for the role of villain in a movie or play. Example: With his rough appearance, Mike is always cast as the heavy.
No, the noun 'heavy' is a concrete noun; a word for the role of villain in a movie or play; a word for a character; a word for a person.The word 'heavy' is also an adjective, a word used to describe a noun.
Yes. "Heavy" is an adjective, meaning it can describe a noun. Many times, an adjective is used before a noun, such as "beautiful blouse," beautiful being the adjective and blouse the noun. In this case, heavy could be used as an adjective in the sentence: "This heavy bowling ball will cause back pains to the players."
Heaviness
tractor is a common or proper noun or concrete noun or abstract noun
Rains is a verb, the third person singular conjugation of rain. "It rains every afternoon."Rains can also be a plural noun, the rains, which indicates heavy rainfall or the season of heavy rainfall.
Deluge is a noun. It refers to a heavy rainfall or a sudden, overwhelming flood of something.
The noun 'jack' is a common noun as a word for a device for lifting heavy things, and the face card in a deck of cards. The noun 'Jack' is a proper noun as the name of a person (place, or thing).
The verb form is "weighed" and the noun is "weight" (how heavy something is).
The noun 'weight' is a common noun. The noun 'weight' is a concrete, countable noun as a word for a measure of the heaviness of an object; a heavy object, especially one being lifted or carried. The noun 'weight' is an abstract, uncountable noun as a word for the the influence or importance that something has.
The noun battery is an uncountable noun as a word for the infliction of unlawful personal violence on another person.The noun battery is a countable noun as a word for small units of stored energy; a fortified emplacement for heavy guns.
It is a noun.