The word Basketball is a noun; a word for a game or a type of ball; a word for a thing.
Basketball Game.
The word 'basketball' is a noun; a singular, common noun; a word for a thing.The noun 'basketball' is an abstract noun as a word for a game or a sport.The noun 'basketball' is a concrete noun as a word for a ball used to play the game or sport.The noun 'basketball' can function as the subject of a sentence or a clause, or the object of a verb or a preposition. Examples:subject: The basketball flew over the fence.object: We all got new uniforms for basketball.
It is a noun and verb. Example as noun: "we have a strong dislike for olives and wouldn't eat them even if we were paid." Example as verb: "I dislike basketball, but I enjoy baseball."
basketball adverbs all ways describe the verb.... for example: running; fast, slow, or medium.
Yes, the word basketball is a singular, common, compound noun; an abstract noun as the word for the game basketball; a concrete noun as the word for the ball for basketball. The noun basketball is a word for a thing.
No, the word 'play' is a noun (play, plays) and a verb (play, plays, playing, played).Examples:Maggie has a part in the play. (noun)Mickie loves to play basketball. (verb)A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.Example: Mickie loves to play basketball. He is trying out for the team. (the pronoun 'he' takes the place of the noun 'Mickie' in the second sentence)
The nouns in the sentence are:girls', a plural possessive noun used to modify the noun 'basketball team'basketball, compound noun used as an attributive noun used to describe the noun 'team'team, singular, common noun, subject of the sentencefirst place, singular, common, compound noun, direct object of the verb 'won'
Because basketball is a sport and is used as a noun or verb not an adjective therefore it cannot describe an object
The word 'noun' is not a verb. The word 'noun' is a noun, a word for a thing.
The noun 'is' is a verb, a form of the verb 'to be'. The verb 'is' functions as an auxiliary verb and a linking verb.
No, it is a verb or a noun (to go around, to surround; a round shape). The adjective form is circular.
noun