No, the word 'increased' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to increase (increases, increased, increasing). The past participle is also an adjective (an increased production, an increased waistline).
The word increase is a noun; a singular, common, abstract noun, a word for the instance of growing or making greater (If I don't get a wage increase, I'm quitting.)
The noun form of "designate" is "designation." For example: "The designation of the historical site resulted in increased tourism."
The word 'gain' is both a noun (gain, gains) and a verb (gain, gains, gaining, gained). Examples: noun: The gain far outweighs the cost. verb: We're trying to gain support for our proposal.
As a noun, for example, the patient was suffering from a bad case of catarrh, exhibiting an increased production of mucus due to a upper respiratory infection.
The wordincreaseis both a noun (increase, increases) and a verb (increase, increases, increasing, increased). Examples:As a noun: Theincreasein prices has really hit my budget hard.As a verb: To make enough cupcakes for the class, youincreasethe recipe by one half.
not on english dictionaries, increment is usually used for the same meaning.
The noun form of "designate" is "designation." For example: "The designation of the historical site resulted in increased tourism."
The term 'cultural borrowing' is a noun phrase, a group of words based on a noun that functions as a unit as a noun in a sentence.The noun phrase 'cultural borrowing' is made up of the adjective 'cultural' which describes the noun(gerund) 'borrowing'.Example uses of a noun phrase:Cultural borrowing occurs all over the world. (subject of the sentence)Globalization has vastly increased cultural borrowing. (direct object of the verb 'has increased')Language is a major source of cultural borrowing. (object of the preposition 'of')
The possessive form for the plural noun receptionists is receptionists'.Example: The receptionists' salaries are being increased.
Discharge can be a verb or a noun. "We did not know when they would discharge him from the hospital" uses "discharge" as a verb. "Watch for increased inflammation or any discharge" uses "discharge" as a noun.
The noun form is mucus, and the adjective is mucous. There does not seem to be a separate word meaning "mucus-y" (resembling mucus).There is another noun mucosity, for "comparative mucousness" (e.g. increased mucosity).
A noun functions in a sentence as the subject of a sentence or clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition. Examples: subject: The demand for the new product has increased steadily. object: Management has not responded to our demand.
The word increase is both a noun (increase, increases) and a verb (increase, increases, increasing, increased). Examples:As a noun: The increase in prices has really hit my budget hard.As a verb: To make enough cupcakes for the class, you increase the recipe by one half.
experience can function both as a count- and as a non-count noun in English. Her experience over the last few days had not increased her confidence as a guitarist. Her experiences over the last few days had not increased her confidence as a guitarist.
The wordincreaseis both a noun (increase, increases) and a verb (increase, increases, increasing, increased).The noun increase is a singular, common noun; a word for a gain in the size, number, or amount of something.Examples:As a noun: Theincreasein prices has really hit my budget hard.As a verb: To make enough cupcakes for the class, youincreasethe recipe by one half.
The word 'gain' is both a noun (gain, gains) and a verb (gain, gains, gaining, gained). Examples: noun: The gain far outweighs the cost. verb: We're trying to gain support for our proposal.
As a noun, for example, the patient was suffering from a bad case of catarrh, exhibiting an increased production of mucus due to a upper respiratory infection.
The wordincreaseis both a noun (increase, increases) and a verb (increase, increases, increasing, increased). Examples:As a noun: Theincreasein prices has really hit my budget hard.As a verb: To make enough cupcakes for the class, youincreasethe recipe by one half.