Oh, dude, like totally! Instruction is totally a noun. It's like a thing, you know? Like when someone tells you what to do, that's instruction. So yeah, it's a noun, like, for sure.
The word instructions is a plural noun. The singular is instruction.
The word lesson is a noun, a common, singular, abstract noun; a word for an assignment or exercise in which something is to be learned; a period of instruction; a class; a word for a thing. Example sentence:Class, the lesson today is nouns.
adjective, it describes the noun teacher
The verb instruct has the abstract noun form instruction.
No. A teacher is nominally a person, a concrete noun. Abstract nouns related to teaching are education and instruction.
Instruction is a noun.
Yes, "educate" is an abstract noun referring to the concept or act of providing knowledge and instruction.
The word instructions is a plural noun. The singular is instruction.
"Instruction" is a noun and so doesn't have a past tense. Only verbs have past tenses. The past tense of the verb "instruct" is "instructed".
The word 'direction' is a noun, a singular, common, abstract noun; a word for a course taken, instruction, guidance, or supervision.
You can find noun worksheets at any website that offers reading instruction resources for teachers and parents. For noun worksheets I would personally recommend http://www.k12reader.com/noun-worksheets/.
In the sentence, "master" functions as a noun, specifically as the object of the preposition "from." It refers to the teacher providing instruction.
In this sentence, the word "master" is a noun, specifically functioning as the subject complement for the noun "teacher."
The word lesson is a noun, a common, singular, abstract noun; a word for an assignment or exercise in which something is to be learned; a period of instruction; a class; a word for a thing. Example sentence:Class, the lesson today is nouns.
adjective, it describes the noun teacher
"Mandation" is a noun, naming the action corresponding to the verb "mandate".
The verb instruct has the abstract noun form instruction.