No, the word 'generally' is the adverb form of the adjective 'general'.
Example: We generally drive to the city but today we thought we'd try the train. (modifies the verb 'drive')
The word "general" is a noun, as a word for "a defined rank in the Army, usually the top rank achievable".
The word "general" is also an adjective that describes a noun as "vague, typical, of a common type".
No, generous is an adjective.
The corresponding noun is generosity.
The word 'generous' is not a noun, it is an adjective used to describe a noun (a generous person).The abstract noun forms for the adjective generous are generousness and generosity.
The noun forms of the verb to generate are generator, generation, and the gerund, generating.
The antonym for the word generation would be destruction. This word is a noun.
The abstract noun forms are magnanimousness or magnanimity.
The abstract noun form of the adjective 'profound' is profoundness.The abstract noun forms of the verb 'to destroy' are destruction and the gerund, destroying.The abstract noun form of the verb 'to repel' is the gerund, repelling.The abstract noun form of the adjective 'generous' is generousness.A related noun form is generosity.The abstract noun form of the adjective 'liberal' is liberalism.note: The word 'liberal' is a concrete noun as a word for a person.The abstract noun form of the adjective 'great' is greatness.
The noun forms of the adjective generous are generousnessand generosity.
The word 'generous' is not a noun, it is an adjective used to describe a noun (a generous person).The abstract noun forms for the adjective generous are generousness and generosity.
The noun form for the adjective generous is generousness.A related noun form isgenerosity.
'Generous' is an adjective. The noun form is generosity.
adjective
The noun forms of the verb to generate are generator, generation, and the gerund, generating.
The antonym for the word generation would be destruction. This word is a noun.
The abstract noun forms are magnanimousness or magnanimity.
giving (used as a noun), selfless ,nice
Yes, the word 'dear' is a noun, an adjective, an adverb, and an interjection.The noun 'dear' is a word for a beloved person, a kind and generous person.
As an adjective, partido can mean generous, or disposed to sharing. (Generous females are partidas.) As a noun, it most generally means party, as in 'political party.' Suffixing the final 's' makes it plural, both as an adjective and a noun.
No, "hospitality" is an abstract noun. It refers to the concept or quality of being hospitable, which is not a tangible or physical thing.