No, there is no word in English 'alot'.
You could mean 'a lot'. The noun 'lot' is a word for a piece of land; a group of many (a lot of people, a lot of things); a group of many offered as a unit or single item; a choice derived from a system of chance such as a lottery.
The term 'a lot' can be an adverb for a great deal of (she cried a lot; it cost a lot).
You could mean the verb 'allot', to give a portion or a share; to allocate, to assign, to distribute.
Yes, the word 'lot' is a noun. The noun 'lot' is a word for:
The word 'lot' also functions as a verb, an indefinite pronoun, and an adverb.
The word contrary is a noun and an adjective. Examples:Noun: Rumor has it that I spend a lot on clothes, but the contrary is true, I just know where to find bargains.Adjective: We can agree to disagree; a contrary opinionshould not spoil a friendship.
A verb in its third person singular present indicative form.
Painting is a gerund, a verb acting as a noun.
The noun 'sugar' is a non-count noun, a word for a substance. Units of sugar are expressed by amount or measure.Examples: a lot of sugar, a pound of sugar, a cup of sugar, etc.The plural form of the noun 'sugar' is reserved for 'types of' or 'kinds of'.Example: The sugars called for in this recipe are brown and white granulated.
Traveling as a present participle can be an adjective, or a noun: My traveling companion has disappeared. (adjective) Traveling is usually a lot of fun. (noun) The past participle seems to require some help. It is a well-traveled path. He took the road less traveled.
Although the noun 'lot' is not a standard collective noun for a specific group of people or things, the noun 'lot' is used a lot as an informal collective noun; for example, a lot of questions, a lot of trouble, a lot of fun, etc.
The word 'lot' is a noun and an adverb. Example sentences: Noun: Please cart your trash off of this parking lot immediately. Noun: The lot next to this one is also for sale. Noun: I drew my lot and got the short straw. Noun: To be rich and famous is her lot in life. Noun: There are a lot of restaurants on this street. Adverb: The restaurants downtown are a lot better. Adverb: We raised a lot more funds this year. There is also an outdated verb form for 'lot' which has been superseded by the verb to 'allot'.
"Lot" is a noun, not a verb.
Depending on use it is a verb or a noun. He bid on the auction lot. verb He placed a bid on the auction lot. noun
The noun 'lot' is a singular, common noun.The noun lot is a concrete noun as a word for:piece of land having specific boundariesa piece of land used for a given purpose (parking lot)the complete grounds of a film studiomiscellaneous articles sold as one unitThe noun lot is an abstract noun as a word for:the use of objects in making a determination or choice at randomthe determination or choice made at randomwhat befalls one because of fortune or fatea number of associated persons or things (the lot that hangs out at that bar; this lot of recyclables has been sorted)
No, the word parking lot (open spaced compound noun) is a common noun, a word for any parking lot.A proper noun is the name of a person, place, thing, or a title; for example:The Parking Lot Game by GamezIndia.comThe Parking Lot Movie, 2010 documentaryGuinness', World's Largest Parking Lot: West Edmonton Mall Parking Lot, 20,000 spaces
No, lots is not an adjective. It is a plural noun. It is used colloquially as an adverb.
Neither, Its a Noun.
The personal pronoun for the noun Danny is 'he' as the subject.The personal pronoun for the noun project is 'it' as the object of the preposition 'to'.He contributed a lot to the project.Danny contributed a lot to it.
The standard collective nouns are a cache of money, a rouleau of money, a wad of money.
Braggart is a noun. It means a person who does a lot of bragging.
The correct usage is "there are a lot of students" because "students" is a plural noun.