education
There is no suffix that means to educate.
No. "Educated" is either an adjective meaning "having attained a level of higher education" or a verbmeaning the "past tense of educate".
The noun forms for the verb to educate are educator, education, and the gerund, educating.
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.
Mentor is a noun for one who aids or helps educate another. One abstract noun could be mentorship.
Yes. It is the adjective form of the noun education.
There is no suffix that means to educate.
No. "Educated" is either an adjective meaning "having attained a level of higher education" or a verbmeaning the "past tense of educate".
educate
The noun forms for the verb to educate are educator, education, and the gerund, educating.
it is neither. Education is a noun. To educate is a verb. Adjective forms are educational and educated.
The word education is a noun. It is facts and skills that have been learned.
No. Educate is something you do. We educated our children at home. - this is something we did. She is educated - this is a state, but the verb is a be verb.
The abstract noun of educate is education.
Education is a noun. It does not have a tense. However, you can say that someone was educated. That would be the past tense of the verb educate.
The word "educated" is the past participle past tense of the verb to educate.The past participle also functions as an adjective.The abstract noun form of the verb to "educate" is education.
The adverb form of the noun is "educationally."