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There is no homophone for patient, but there is a homophone for the plural patients, which is patience.
Tolerantly is another word for patiently.
The noun 'patient' is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a person (or an animal).The word 'patient' is also an adjective, a word used to describe a noun.The noun form of the adjective 'patient' is patientness.A related noun form is patience.
The homophone for Patience is Patient.
A person can be patient.
The abstract noun form for the adjective patient is patience.
Yes. Patient is the root word, and an adjective. (As in: "the patient man") "-ence" is the suffix, used to make the noun "patience" ("He showed patience") And "Im-" is the prefix added to negate the noun. ("He showed impatience")
The noun patience is the abstract noun for the adjective patient. A few prepositions could be used with this noun, including of (the quality of patience), for (the pastor asked for patience), and with (working with patience).
Patience does not have a verb form, but you can describe a person as being patient, or waiting patiently, or as having a lot of patience.
He who has patience : υπομονετικός (ipomonetikos) a sick person : ασθενής (asthenis)
The word patience appears throughout the bible. It appears 34 times in the King James Version (KJV) as well as the words patient and patiently which appear 9 times and 6 times, respectively. The exact word patience only appears 16 times in the NIV so the count depends on which translation is used and the exact word choices the translators used.
The difference between patient loving and loving patience is that one of them is dealing with love, and the other is with patience. Patient loving means that someone is slow and patient in the way that they fall in love with someone, and loving patience means that someone has a love of patience, and likes being patient with people.