No, it not. The word aisle is a noun (path, walkway), although it is used as a noun adjunct in terms such as aisle seat.
Furtive is not a noun.The man across the aisle in the bus shot me a furtiveglance.In this sentence furtive is an adjective.
The plural form for the noun aisle is aisles.
The spelling aisle is correct (e.g. The bride walked down the aisle to meet her groom).
The passenger's luggage was wider than the aisle of an airplane.
The noun form of the adjective buoyant is buoyancy, a concrete noun; a word for a physical property. There is no abstract noun form of the adjective buoyant, however, the noun 'buoyancy' can be used in an abstract context, for example: A feeling of buoyancy came over me when she started down the aisle.
Furtive is not a noun.The man across the aisle in the bus shot me a furtiveglance.In this sentence furtive is an adjective.
The homophone for "isle" is "aisle." It is a strip of space between rows of seats in a building like a church or theater, or it can mean a passage between shelves in a supermarket.
aisle&island
I'll clear the aisle! I'll not walk down the aisle with the likes of you.
see http:/www.answers.com/aisle
To the Aisle was created in 1957-07.
Frozen aisle.
Aisle
aisle is a "corridor" of sorts, either in a supermarket (cookies on aisle five) or in a theatre (the lady in the 5th aisle). Isle is an island, usually a small one
The ISBN of Centaur Aisle is 0345297709.
The plural form for the noun aisle is aisles.
The homophone for "aisle" that means "island" is "isle." Both words sound the same when spoken aloud.