Yes, the noun 'joke' is a common noun, a general word for something said or done that is intended to make people laugh.
Proper nouns are the unique names of people, places, or things.
Common nouns are general words for people, places, or thing.
The noun laughter is a concrete noun, a word for something that can be felt physically and heard by others.
Yes, the word clown is both a verb (clown, clowns, clowning, clowned) and a noun (clown, clowns). Examples:verb: Don't clown around while you're eating.noun: The clown had a gift for each child.
"Joke" can be a noun meaning "trick played on someone", "story with a funny punchline", or "something that is ridiculous in its inadequacy". "Joke" can also be a verb meaning "talk humorously" or "make jokes".
Common
Common noun
No, it is a noun (trick, prank) or a verb. Used with another noun (e.g. joke book), it is a noun adjunct rather than an adjective.
No, "joke" is not a verb. It is a noun that refers to something said or done to provoke laughter or amusement.
Jokes is a noun as long as you use it as the plural form of joke. (e.g. She told too many jokes.) If it is used as in the sentence, She jokes too much, it is a verb. Hope I don't sound like a textbook too much. :)
The noun laughter is a concrete noun, a word for something that can be felt physically and heard by others.
Yes, the word clown is both a verb (clown, clowns, clowning, clowned) and a noun (clown, clowns). Examples:verb: Don't clown around while you're eating.noun: The clown had a gift for each child.
Jokes is a noun (plural form of joke) and a verb (third person singular conjugation of joke).
"Joke" can be a noun meaning "trick played on someone", "story with a funny punchline", or "something that is ridiculous in its inadequacy". "Joke" can also be a verb meaning "talk humorously" or "make jokes".
common noun
A joke (noun) is a story that makes you laugh. Joking is talking in a manner that is not serious.
Common
Common noun
common