Yes, flood is a noun, a common, concrete, singular noun. Flood can also be a verb and an adjective. Example sentences:
Noun: A flood covered the park.
Verb: When the cranberries are ready to harvest, they flood the field with water so the ripe berries will float to the top.
Adjective: I wouldn't buy a house on the flood plain of the river.
yes it can flood. however they are built in order to stop flooding.
Flooding
calendar = noun and verb heavens = noun, plural archaeologist = noun Winnebago = noun, proper written mathematics = adjective + noun the hickory fort = article + noun + noun (the noun 'hickory' used to describe the noun 'fort' is functioning as a noun adjunct)
The word terror is a noun. It is mostly an uncountable noun.
The term 'Saturday afternoon' is a noun phrase, the noun 'afternoon' described by the noun 'Saturday'.A noun functioning as an adjective to describe another noun is called an attributive noun or a noun adjunct.The noun 'Saturday' is a proper noun, the name of a specific day of the week. A proper noun is always capitalized.The noun 'afternoon' is a common noun, a general word for a period of any day.A noun phrase is a group of words based on a noun that functions as a unit in a sentence in any position that can be filled by a noun. Examples:Saturday afternoon is the class picnic. (subject of the sentence)We're going to the picnic on Saturday afternoon. (object of the preposition 'on')
The word 'flood' is a noun, a word for a flow of water that rises and spreads over the land; a general word for an overwhelming quantity of people or things; a word for a thing.The noun form of the verb to flood is the gerund, flooding.
No, the noun 'flood' is a concrete noun, a word for an overflow of water that submerges land which is usually dry; a word for a physical thing.The noun 'flood' can be used in an abstract context such as a flood of information or a flood of emotions.The word 'flood' is also a verb: flood, floods, flooding, flooded.
1.minor flooding 2.moderate flooding 3.major flooding _______ extra is a 'recording flooding'
It can be (flooding rains, flooding basements). Both the present participle (flooding) and the past partciple (flooded) are adjectives for the verb 'to flood.'
No. Tornadoes do not cause flooding.
Fluvial flooding is - Produced by the action of a river or stream. Coastal flooding is - An overflowing of water onto land that is normally dry.
flooding means drowning of areas by heavy rain in considerable time, but flash flooding means, heavy rain in short time.
Hydrologists study flooding.
truck gas flooding
In a modern city flooding creates chaos.
Sure, ancient Egyptians had Nile flooding. During flooding, farmers were working in Pyramids construction.
No, the noun flock is a concrete noun; a word for a group of birds or animals; a word for a physical thing.An abstract noun is a word for something that can't be experienced by any of the five physical senses; something that can't be seen, heard, smelled, tasted, or touched. An abstract noun is a word for something that is known, learned, thought, understood, or felt emotionally.