Damage meaning to cause breakage or vandalism to something is an action and therefore a verb.
Damage as in something having been damaged or tarnished is a noun.
A verb is a word that describes an action (run, walk, etc), a state of being (exist, stand, etc) or occurrence (happen, become, etc).
A noun is a word that is used to describe a person (man, lady, teacher, etc), place (home, city, beach, etc) or thing (car, banana, book, etc).
The word damage is both a verb (damage, damages, damaging, damaged) and a noun (damage, damages). Examples:Verb: Indulging in gossip can damage your own reputation.Noun: The damage to the mailbox was minimal, the damage to the car was major.
No. Damage is a noun, or a verb whose past participle (damaged) can be an adjective. However, damage is sometimes used as an adjunct noun, as in damage control and damage radius.
The abstract noun is damaging, a verbal noun called a gerund. Another noun form for the verb to damage is damageability. The word damage is also a noun.
The combination, for example: 'can help the people' is a verb phrase. A verb phrase functions as:A sentence predicate (the verb and the words that follow from it) of a sentence.We can help the people.A noun clause:We can help the people clean up storm damage.
The word 'destroyed' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to destroy.The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective (a destroyed building, a destroyedhabitat).The noun forms of the verb to destroy are destroyer, destruction, and the gerund, destroying.
The word "damage" can be a noun or a verb. As a noun, it refers to harm or injury caused to something or someone. As a verb, it means to harm or impair something.
The word damage is both a verb (damage, damages, damaging, damaged) and a noun (damage, damages). Examples:Verb: Indulging in gossip can damage your own reputation.Noun: The damage to the mailbox was minimal, the damage to the car was major.
No, the word 'damaged' is not a noun.The word 'damaged' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to damage. The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.The word damage is both a verb and a noun.The noun 'damage' is a word for a word for loss or harm caused by injury to a person or thing; a word for payment ordered by a court for loss or injury; a word for a thing.Example uses:Indulging in gossip can damage your own reputation. (verb)The damage to the mailbox was minor. The damage to the car was major. (noun)
No. Damage is a noun, or a verb whose past participle (damaged) can be an adjective. However, damage is sometimes used as an adjunct noun, as in damage control and damage radius.
The word "damage" can be a noun, or it can be a verb. As a noun, it refers to something being harmed or hurt or made defective in some way. For example: After the fire at the apartment house, the residents went inside to survey the damage to their property. As a verb, it is used like this: Be careful of my rare glass vase and do not damage it when you move it.
The abstract noun is damaging, a verbal noun called a gerund. Another noun form for the verb to damage is damageability. The word damage is also a noun.
No. Bombing is a noun or a verb. Examples are below. The bombing did massive damage to the countryside. (bombing = noun) The army is bombing the enemy compound. (bombing = verb)
No, it is not. It is a noun, meaning harm or bodily damage. It is a noun form of the verb to injure (to harm).
The combination, for example: 'can help the people' is a verb phrase. A verb phrase functions as:A sentence predicate (the verb and the words that follow from it) of a sentence.We can help the people.A noun clause:We can help the people clean up storm damage.
The word attack is a noun and a verb. The noun form is an attempt to cause damage or harm. The verb form means to apply violence to something or someone.
The word 'damage' is both a noun (damage, damages) and a verb (damage, damages, damaging, damaged).The noun 'damage' is a singular, common, abstract noun as a word for loss or harm caused by injury to a person or thing; a word for payment ordered by a court for loss or injury; a word for a thing.
No, the word 'destroy' is a verb: destroy, destroys, destroying, destroyed.The verb to "destroy" means to put an end to, ruin, or damage something or defeat someone.The noun forms of the verb to destroy are: destroyer, destruction, and the gerund, destroying.