Yes, the word 'large' is a noun as a word for a clothing size for persons who are heavier or broader than average; a garment in this size.
No, the term 'large restaurants' is a noun phrase; a combination of the adjective 'large' describing the plural noun 'restaurants'.A collective noun is a noun used to group people or things in a descriptive way.The most common collective noun for the noun 'restaurants' is 'chain' as in 'a chain of restaurants'.This collective noun can also function as 'a chain of large restaurants'.
The adjective in the sentence is large (describes the noun crop).The noun in the sentence is grapes (object of the preposition 'of').
The word giant, as a word for a person or thing that is very large, is a concrete noun. Andre the Giant (André Roussimoff) is a name, a proper concrete noun. The word giant is also an adjective used to describe a noun as extremely large, or relatively large.
The noun 'galaxy' is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for an extremely large group of stars and planets; a large group of impressive people or things. The noun 'galaxy' is used as a collective noun for a galaxy of stars (heavenly luminescence or human luminaries).
The word 'large' is a noun, as a word for a clothing size for persons who are heavier or broader than average; a garment in this size.The noun form for the adjective large is largeness.
The word 'large' is a noun and an adjective.The noun 'large' is a word for a clothing size.The adjective 'large' describes a noun as bigger than usual.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.The pronoun that takes the place of the noun 'large' is it.Example: I prefer to wear the large. It gives me more freedom of movement.
No, the term 'large restaurants' is a noun phrase; a combination of the adjective 'large' describing the plural noun 'restaurants'.A collective noun is a noun used to group people or things in a descriptive way.The most common collective noun for the noun 'restaurants' is 'chain' as in 'a chain of restaurants'.This collective noun can also function as 'a chain of large restaurants'.
Large is an adjective
No, the noun 'large' is a common noun, a word for a size of clothing (small, medium, large).The word 'large' is also an adjective (a large dog), a word that describes a noun; and an adverb, a word that modifies a verb (living large).A proper noun is the name of a person, place, thing, or a title; for example:Large Louie and the Band, blues musiciansLarge Street, Philadelphia, PAThe Large Hadron Collider, near Geneva, Switzerland'Hero at Large', 1980 movie with John Ritter
The abstract noun form for the adjective large is largeness.The word 'large' is also a concrete noun as a word for a clothing size for persons who are heavier or broader than average; a garment in this size.
In the given sentence, the word 'large' is an adjectivedescribing the noun 'fish'.
Yes, it is a proper noun. It is a large island in Indonesia.
The adjective in the sentence is large (describes the noun crop).The noun in the sentence is grapes (object of the preposition 'of').
Yes, the noun 'large' is a common noun; a general word for a clothing size for persons who are heavier or broader than average; a general word for a garment in this size; a word for any large.The word 'large' is also an adjective: large, larger, largest.
No, the word 'largest' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun.The word 'largest' is the superlative form of the adjective 'large'.The word 'large' is a noun as a word for a clothing size.The noun form of the adjective 'large' is largeness.
The word giant, as a word for a person or thing that is very large, is a concrete noun. Andre the Giant (André Roussimoff) is a name, a proper concrete noun. The word giant is also an adjective used to describe a noun as extremely large, or relatively large.
The noun 'galaxy' is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for an extremely large group of stars and planets; a large group of impressive people or things. The noun 'galaxy' is used as a collective noun for a galaxy of stars (heavenly luminescence or human luminaries).