To be honest, I don't know the real answer to your question. It can be used as a noun, adjective and adverb but it seems to me that it's rarely used as an adjective. According to what I've observed, it's more often used as an adverb. Anyway, here's the sentence: As an adverb: He traveled incognito to escape his responsibilities. As a noun: His incognito was in a lot of danger.
Note: Correct me if I'm wrong. I would gladly accept corrections.
Motivation is used a noun in the sentence.
when use ing or noun in the sentence
mandate can be a verb or a noun
The noun clause in the given sentence is "that he would use up his inheritance".This relative clause functions as an appositive (a word or phrase renaming something earlier in the sentence). This relative clause 'relates' to the noun 'worry', the subject of the sentence.
The nouns in the sentence, people and hall, are both concrete nouns. There are no abstract nouns in the sentence. The use of the word 'protest' is the trick. As a noun, protest is an abstract noun, but in your sentence it is the verb form 'to protest', not a noun.
(Incognito as an adverb means anonymously)The prince traveled abroad incognito.
Google has an incognito feature that allows you to surf the web anonymously. Incognito is the ability to do something without being noticed.
The man became incognito when he hid.
They tried to act incognito and avoid being seen.
"The man was incognito, because he was a detective."
how can you use the word content in noun and verb in a sentence
Yes you can it is a noun and a verb depending on how you use it
its a noun
As a noun.
The cracks in the wall were expanding, indicating a structural problem.
Watch for the red scarf- I'll be arriving incognito and no one else will know who i am
One way to use "color" as a noun in a sentence is: "The artist used a vibrant palette of colors in the painting."