Noun
It is not a noun at all.
happiness is an abstract noun
Bravery is an abstract noun.
Yes, the noun 'course' is a common noun, a general word for a series of classes; a series of medical treatments; a direction or path that someone or something follows; a part of a meal; a place for a sports event; a general word for a thing.The word 'course' is also a verb: course, courses, coursing, coursed.
Religion is a noun.of course it is dumby
The word 'direction' is a noun, a singular, common, abstract noun; a word for a course taken, instruction, guidance, or supervision.
Every encyclopedia entry is for a noun. The information concerning that noun will, of course, involve words of every grammatical type.
Course is a noun. It refers to a direction or class.
its a noun (of course)
The pronoun 'that' in the sentence is a demonstrative pronoun.A demonstrative pronoun takes the place of a noun indicating near or far in place or time.The demonstrative pronouns are: this, that, these, those.Note: The demonstrative pronouns are adjectives when placed before a noun to describe that noun (that course, that noun).
The plural of course is courses.
No. It is a noun (ship's course, golf course, river course). The meaning is a path, route, or progression. Course is a noun-adjunct in the term 'three course meal' (each stage of the meal is a course or path).
Sourdough is the name of a type of bread. Dough is a noun not an adjective. This would be a compound word and only one word is a description of the other. Sourdough can also be a single adjective because it describes the bread (noun) An exampe of a compound adjective would be something that helps to describe the same noun like a thirty-minute course. "Thirty-minute" as the adjectives and "course" as the noun. Thirty describes the amount and minute describes the time of the noun (course).
What type of noun is childhood
yes, of course!
Routine is a noun - a regular course of procedure