It is an "abstract" noun-- a word you cannot experience with any of your five senses. (You can experience the RESULT of being afraid, but you cannot see fright, or touch it, or taste it, or hear it or smell it. Thus, it is an abstract noun.)
Yes, the noun fright is an abstract noun, a word for an emotion (or an opinion, Her hair is a fright.)
Fright.
No, the word 'scary' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun as causing fright or alarm (a scary movie; a scary ride).
i am not sure
Noun
Yes, the word 'fright' is a noun.
Yes, the noun fright is an abstract noun, a word for an emotion (or an opinion, Her hair is a fright.)
Fright.
fright
The noun is fright, the verb is frighten (to scare) and the past tense or adjective is frightened.
Afraid is an adjective or part of a verb, not an adverb. The noun would be fright.
According to the Oxford Standard Dictionary the word fright means "a sudden intense feeling of fear". The word fright is a noun which also means fear.
The noun "fright" is normally a state of fear, or something that causes fear (a scare).(The idiom looks a fright means looks scarily bad, or a monstrosity.)Synonyms for fright may be alarm, dismay, dread, horror, panic, shiver, shock, terror, or trepidation.
No, frighten is a verb (frighten, frightens, frightening, frightened). The noun form is fright or the present participle of the verb (gerund) frightening.
No, the word 'scary' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun as causing fright or alarm (a scary movie; a scary ride).
No, the word 'frightened' is the past participle, past tense of the verb 'to frighten'; the past participle is also an adjective. Examples:verb: We were frightened by the coming hurricane.adjective: The frightened cat jumped behind the sofa.The noun form is fright, an abstract noun, a word for an emotion.
The word scary is an adjective. It is used to describe something that can cause fright.