Busy can't be a noun, which is a thing.
Busy is an adjective, which describes things. "A busy street".
yes it is a noun
The adjective busy has the abstract noun busyness, which became used as the separate word "business" to refer to occupational and commercial activity.
The word "busy" is an adjective, applied to a noun, pronoun, or name. The adverb form is "busily".
yes, bakery is a common noun . Bakery may be part of a proper noun when it is used in the name of a particular bakery, such as Sunshine Bakery or Busy Bee Bakery.
Road is a noun. Roads is the plural form of road. Roads is a plural noun. All the roads out of town are busy.
The noun related to the adjective 'busy' is business, formerly spelled/spelt busyness .The earliest written record of 'busyness' was in 1849, in a work by Henry Thoreau.In due course the idea of 'a busyness' being a good word for a regular occupation or trade became separate and distinct from the idea of just being busy, which is what 'a busyness' really means. So the spelling for 'a business' meaning an entity in itself was gradually changed from a general busyness to a business.
The adjective busy has the abstract noun busyness, which became used as the separate word "business" to refer to occupational and commercial activity.
No, the word 'busiest' is the superlative form of the adjective busy (busier, busiest).The abstract noun form of the adjective 'busy' is business.
After a busy day is a prepositional phrase.after - prepositiona - articlebusy - adjectiveday - noun
an adjective is where there is a word in front of a noun and it describes. e.g. The dog crossed the busy road. busy is the adjective
Business is a noun. It names an occupation.
yes business is a common word in the world of business
The word "busy" is an adjective, applied to a noun, pronoun, or name. The adverb form is "busily".
It can be used as a verb in the sense of to make somebody busy or occupied. It's primarily used as an adjective, however.
The noun 'curse' is an abstract noun as a word for a bad situation or event caused by someone's deliberate use of their magic powers; an unpleasant situation or influence that continues for a long time; a word for a concept.The noun 'curse' is a concrete noun as a word for an offensive or very impolite word or phrase spoken or written.The noun form of the verb to curse is the gerund, cursing, a concrete noun as a word for spoken words.The abstract noun form of the adjective 'busy' is business.
yes, bakery is a common noun . Bakery may be part of a proper noun when it is used in the name of a particular bakery, such as Sunshine Bakery or Busy Bee Bakery.
Yes, busy in an adjective: busy, busier, busiest.
Road is a noun. Roads is the plural form of road. Roads is a plural noun. All the roads out of town are busy.