a cartalope
"Painter" is a noun. If a word ends in "-er" and the preceding letters spell a verb, the original word is almost always an "agency" noun.
The noun art is a common noun, a word for any art of any kind.The noun art is an singular, uncountable, abstract noun as a word for something that people feel has value because it is beautiful or expresses ideas.The noun art is a singular, uncountable, concrete noun as a word for paintings, drawings, and sculptures that are created to be beautiful or to express ideas.The noun arts is a plural, uncountable, abstract noun as a word for activities such as art, music, film, theater, and dance, considered together; subjects of study that are not scientific, such as history, literature, and languages.The noun art is a singular, countable, abstract noun as a word for an activity that needs special skills or knowledge (the art of glass blowing, the art of embroidery, the arts of writing and performing, etc.)The noun Art (capital A) is a singular, propernoun as the name of a person, often the nickname for the name Arthur.
Yes, the word museum is a noun, a singular, common noun; a word for a thing.
Word Painting -HorseMeat
The contemporary, general word for an artist is "καλλιτέχνησ." It is literally a compound word meaning "good technician. "
A Cartalope
The word is cartouche.
cartouche
The word 'always' is an adverb, a word that modifies a verb, an adjective, or another adverb. Example:He always remembers my birthday.Your garden is always beautiful.
It is almost always used as a preposition.
cartouche
The word 'ribose' is a noun, a word for a type of sugar; a word for a thing. A noun functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition. Example: Ribose is a sugar that is always found in RNA. (subject of the sentence)
It is almost always used as a preposition.
The word "always" appears 62 times in 59 verses in the KJV bible.
cryptconscripts (men who were drafted into the army)colossus (a gigantic statue)cartouche (an Egyptian monument containing the name of a ruler or god)
No. In my experience, an eyeglass is often found as a single item.
Yes, "STRESSED" is an example of such a word where rearranging the letters always forms a legitimate word ("DESSERT"). These types of words are called "anagrams".