The word 'rival' is a noun, an adjective or a verb.
The noun 'rival' is a word for a person or thing competing with another for the same objective; a competitor
EXAMPLES
As a noun: Ours is a stadium without a rival.
As an adjective: They are our rival businesses.
As a verb: The Thames can rival any European river in beauty.
no
No, the noun 'rival' is a common noun, a word for any rival of any kind, of anyone.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, thing, or a title; for example:Dr. Jan Rival MD, Internal Medicine, Detroit, MIRival Court, East Hartford, CT or Rival Street, Kareela, NSW AustraliaRival Crockpot (product of Sunbeam Products, Inc. dba Jarden Consumer Solutions)Rival Dog Food"Rival", a novel by Sara Bennett Wealer
My rival for the prize has a very good submission.
Rival is a noun--He is my rival.Rival is a verb--The brightness in her eyes rivals that of the sun.Rival is an adjective--a rival business.
The word adversary is a noun. An adversary is a rival.
They are both nouns, either way. A noun is a person, place, or thing.
To identify the appositive phrase, look for a noun or noun phrase that renames or provides additional information about another noun in the sentence. In the example, "the best player on the rival team" is the appositive phrase that describes "Diane." It provides more context about who Diane is, and it can be removed without altering the core meaning of the sentence.
No, but you do have to experience all of the rival events for a rival couple before that couple can have a rival marriage and a rival kid. -AriCharae
The word 'rival' is a noun, a word for a person or thing competing with another for the same objective; a competitor.
Yes Male - May is Rival Female - Brandon is Rival
The word competition is a noun, a singular, common, abstract noun; a word for a test of skill or ability, a contest; a rival business striving toseverethe same customer base; a word for a competitor.
Comcast is their biggest rival.