Yes it is
Education is a common noun. You can't use education in the middle of a sentence and capitalize it, like this: I need Education. You need to lowercase it: I need education. Hope I helped! :)
No. Education is an abstract noun.
The noun 'education' is a common, uncountable (mass), abstract noun; a word for a concept.
The word 'education' is a noun, a common, uncountable, abstract noun; a word for the knowledge or skill obtained or developed by a learning process.
The noun 'education' is a common, uncountable, abstract noun; a word for the process of acquiring knowledge or skill; the body of knowledge that someone possesses or provides.
Yes, the noun 'school' is a common noun, a general word for any school of any kind.
There is no concrete noun for the abstract noun 'education'. The noun 'education' is a word for a concept; an idea.
The common noun for TAFE (Technical and Further Education) Australia, and TAFE (Texas Association of Future Educators) of Austin Texas is organization.The common noun for TAFE (Tractors and Farm Equipment Ltd.) India is company.
No, the the word 'Dr. Simon' is a proper noun, the title and name of a specific person (real or fictional).The noun 'doctor' is a common noun as a general word for a person with specific training and education.
The noun education is a common, a word for any education of any kind.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, thing or a title; for example:Phyllis Carlson, Director of Rural Education, Alaska Department of EducationEducation Street, Cambridge, MA or Education Lane, Portsmouth, RIEducation World Ltd. (recruitment agency), Gateshead, UK"The Education of Little Tree", a novel by Asa Earl Carter
No, the word 'educate' is a verb: educate, educates, educating, educated.Example: The program is an effort to educate the public about infant and child nutrition.The noun forms for the verb to educate are educator, education, and the gerund, educating.
Common noun