It can be a noun or a verb, depending on how it is used. For example, He greased the pan would be the verb form. They scraped the grease off of the pan would be the noun usage.
No, grease is a noun and a verb. Greasy is an adjective.
Grease can be used as a noun (the object 'grease'), or as a verb (the act of applying grease to something). For example:'He applied grease to the pan to prevent food from sticking to it.''He was sure to grease the pan to prevent food from sticking to it.'
No. Axle is always a noun. It can be used as a noun adjunct (axle grease).
The noun 'grease' is an uncountable noun, a word for a substance.Like many uncountable nouns for substances, the plural form, greases, is used for 'kinds of' or 'types of'; for example:The greases appropriate for making pie crust are solid greases, lard or butter among them. There is no such thing as good pie crust made from 'healthy' greases. Some greases I've used are from cooking chicken or turkey and using the greases to make the crust for chicken or turkey pie.
Grease was not a book before it was a movie or a musical.
That is the correct spelling of "grease" (oily lubricant) or the capitalized "Grease" (a musical about the 1960s). The European country with an ancient civilization is spelled Greece.
The noun 'grease' is an uncountable noun as a word for a substance. The plural form for some substances is reserved for 'types of' or 'kinds of'. The plural form of the noun grease is greases. The plural possessive form is greases'.
The homophone of "grease" is "grease." Homophones are words that sound the same but have different meanings, and in this case, "grease" only has one spelling as both the verb and the noun.
Grease can be used as a noun (the object 'grease'), or as a verb (the act of applying grease to something). For example:'He applied grease to the pan to prevent food from sticking to it.''He was sure to grease the pan to prevent food from sticking to it.'
No. Axle is always a noun. It can be used as a noun adjunct (axle grease).
The common word is spelled grease, an oil-based lubricant.The proper noun is an ancient European country on the Mediterranean Sea, Greece.
The word solvent is both a noun and an adjective. Example uses: Noun: This solvent will remove the stains from your driveway. Adjective: You need a solvent cleaner to remove grease and oil stains. Adjective: That is a good investment, they are a solvent company.
The likely word is the plural noun "degrees" (intervals, levels, as of temperature).The similar word suggested by the spelling is degrease, to remove grease.
Some nouns that start with the letter G:gableGabongalgalegallerygalleygallonGambiaganderGanges RivergaragegardengardeniagarnetgeckogendergeneralgeologistGeorge WashingtonGeorgiagerbilgermGermanygenerositygentilitygentlemangeraniumGeronimoGhanaghostgiantgiftgillgiltgingergiraffegirlglareglassglassesgleamgleeglobegloomgnatgnugoalgoatgoldgoldenrodgoldfishgoodgoofgoopgooseGorgonzolagorillagourdgovernmentgraciousnessgradegraduateGrand CanyongrandmagranolagrantgrapegrassgratitudegrayGreat Barrier ReefGreat Wall of ChinagreedgreenGrenadagrenadegringripgristlegritgroomgrossgroundgroupgrovegruntGuatemalaguileguiltGuineagulfGulf of MexicogullgullygumgunguyGuyanagyregyroscope
3 lithium grease - 2 lithium grease = 1 lithium grease? math?
From the grease compatibility chart they are incompatible
Grease
You grease the suspension on a 2005 Chevy Trailblazer by attaching a grease gun to the grease fittings. Grease is then injected into the fitting until it leaks back out.