no, adjective.
The noun 'iron' is a common noun, a general word for a type of metal (an element), a general word for a household appliance; a general word for a type of golf club.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, thing, or a title; for example:Jeremy Irons, British actorIron River, MI 49935Iron House Hotel, Milwaukee, WI"The Man In The Iron Mask", 1998 movie with Leonardo DiCaprio and John MalkovichThe word 'iron' is also a verb: iron, irons, ironing, ironed.
The opposite of "easier" is "harder."
softer
The correct form is "harder." When comparing two things, the comparative form of "hard" is "harder." Adding "more" before "hard" would be redundant and incorrect. So, it is grammatically accurate to say "harder" when comparing the difficulty of two things.
Proper noun
Harder is an adjective; the comparative form of hard (harder, hardest).
To change the verb "expect" into a noun, you can use the word "expectation." This noun refers to a belief or anticipation that something will happen. For example, "Her expectation of success motivated her to work harder."
As an adjective; try disparate. The noun form is much harder but "gap" might work.
yes they will win the game
Both. You must try harder. (verb) I got it right after my second try. (noun)
No, the word 'possible' is an adjective, a word that describes a noun: a possible goal.The word 'possible' is occasionally used as a noun in place of the noun possibility: The possible is easy, the impossible is a bit harder.
The noun 'iron' is a common noun, a general word for a type of metal (an element), a general word for a household appliance; a general word for a type of golf club.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, thing, or a title; for example:Jeremy Irons, British actorIron River, MI 49935Iron House Hotel, Milwaukee, WI"The Man In The Iron Mask", 1998 movie with Leonardo DiCaprio and John MalkovichThe word 'iron' is also a verb: iron, irons, ironing, ironed.
In what context: harder as in metals, or harder as in difficult?
Yes, the word 'descending' functions as a gerund, the present participle of a verb that functions as a noun in a sentence.The present participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.Examples:Climbing the tree was fun but descending was harder. (noun, subject of the second half of the compound sentence)She was descending the stairs like a princess in her gown. (verb)She lined up the students in descending order of height. (adjective)The other noun forms for the verb to descend are descendant and descent.
The opposite of "easier" is "harder."
Birch is much harder.
No. Harder is an Adverb.