The noun 'misery' is an abstract noun, a word for an emotion that is felt within a person.
The plural form of the noun 'misery' is miseries.
The abstract noun form for the adjective miserable is miserableness.A related abstract noun form is misery.
misery
maybe you should learn how to spell "speech" correctly before you start inquiring about it. Misery is a noun, for godssake. It is an idea.
No, it is a noun. The related adjective is 'miserable'.
The noun form for the adjective miserable is miserableness. Another noun form is misery.
Yes, joy and sorrow are abstract nouns because we cannot feel them, they are emotions. The nouns you can feel are called concrete nouns. example- hair, bracelet, remote. etc. basically any object is a concrete noun.
Below is a list of words that are synonymous to sorrow: - grief - mourning - sadness - distress - worry - torment - unhappiness - regret - trouble
Yes, the noun 'hell' is an abstractnoun, a word for a place or condition of misery or wickedness; a word for a concept.
Yes, "misery" is a common noun. It refers to a state of suffering or distress and is not capitalized unless it begins a sentence. Common nouns denote general items or concepts, as opposed to proper nouns, which name specific entities.
Miseria is a literal Italian equivalent of the English word "misery." The pronunciation of the feminine singular noun will be "mee-ZER-ya" in Italian.
No, it is not. It is an adjective related to the noun misery.