The word 'cold' is a noun and an adjective.
The noun 'cold' is a word for a low temperature, a common viral infection. Example:
Please come in out of the cold.
She missed school today because she has a cold.
Some synonyms for the noun cold are:
frigidity
chill
iciness
infection
sniffles
indifference
Some nouns that the adjective cold can describe:
cold drinks
cold feet
cold heart
cold day
cold wind
cold melon
freezing, icy, fridgid, and frosty are some
Chilly, Brisk, Frosty, Bitter, frosty, SNOW!
Freezing, snowy, frosty im not very good at making up words + i made up this question hahahahahaha
forze freeze shiver
The nouns are hand, cold, and water.
Some abstract nouns for the expression 'cold feet' are concern, nervousness, or timidity.
Wind and night are nouns. For the most part a noun is an object - something you can touch or feel. A noun can also be a name, and sometimes even an intangible object or feeling (e.g. love). This means in the sentence provided the nouns are 'wind' and 'night'. The wind is something you can feel. The night is also classified as an object (however large it may be). 'Cold' is an adjective - it describes the noun (the wind). 'Blew' is a verb - it tells us what the wind did.
The types of nouns are: Singular or plural nouns Common or proper nouns Concrete or abstract nouns Possessive nouns Collective nouns Compound nouns
Nouns do not have degrees; nouns are singular or plural, common or proper, concrete or abstract, etc.Adjectives are the words that have degrees of comparison; the degrees are:positivecomparativesuperlativeExamples: cold, colder, coldesthappy, happier, happiestgood, better, bestmodern, more modern, most modernspecial, more special, most special
The nouns in the sentence are: Saturday and February.
The nouns are hand, cold, and water.
Some abstract nouns for the expression 'cold feet' are concern, nervousness, or timidity.
Some abstract nouns (synonyms) for 'cold fee' are cowardice, uncertainty, apprehension, doubt.
Wind and night are nouns. For the most part a noun is an object - something you can touch or feel. A noun can also be a name, and sometimes even an intangible object or feeling (e.g. love). This means in the sentence provided the nouns are 'wind' and 'night'. The wind is something you can feel. The night is also classified as an object (however large it may be). 'Cold' is an adjective - it describes the noun (the wind). 'Blew' is a verb - it tells us what the wind did.
Here are some: *humid *warm *hot *cool *cold *freezing *dry Good Luck!
Examples of 'weather' nouns made into adjectives:noun, wind;adjective,windynoun, rain; adjective, rainynoun, cold; adjective, coldnoun, heat; adjective, hotnoun, chill; adjective, chillynoun, snow; adjective, snowy
From a place: London or the suburbs. From a person: a gift or a cold. From a thing: a seed or the sky. The words: place London suburbs person gift thing a cold seed sky are all nouns.
Nouns do not have 'positive' forms.Adjectives are the part of speech that are positive, comparative, or superlative; for example:The positive form of the adjective 'cold' is 'cold'.The comparative form is 'colder'.The superlative form is 'coldest'.
Kinds of Nouns: singular and plural nouns common and proper nouns abstract and concrete nouns possessive nouns collective nouns compound nouns count and non-count (mass) nouns gerunds (verbal nouns) material nouns (words for things that other things are made from) attributive nouns (nouns functioning as adjectives)
Proper nouns are general nouns while common nouns name specific nouns
The types of nouns are: Singular or plural nouns Common or proper nouns Concrete or abstract nouns Possessive nouns Collective nouns Compound nouns