The word 'nine' is a noun and an adjective.
The noun 'nine' is a word for the number that follows eight; one of a series that follows number eight; a word for a quantity; a word for a thing.
Yes, it can be, when it is used before a noun (e.g. nine students).The number itself (9) is a noun, and it can also be a pronoun.
The noun 'nine' is a common noun; a general word for the number that follows eight; a general word for one of a series that follows number eight; a general word for a quantity.A proper noun is the name or title of a person, a place, or a thing; for example, Nine West (brand) women's shoes or Nine Corner Lake in the Town of Caroga, NY.
Noun, pronoun, verb, adjective, article, preposition, conjunction, inierjection
Yes, a number is a noun, a year is a noun; a number is a thing, a year is a thing.
Professor is the highest status in the educational system.
Either a noun or an adjective. Fundamentally, nine is an adjective of quantity, but it is also used as a noun to mean "nine distinct things."
Yes, it can be, when it is used before a noun (e.g. nine students).The number itself (9) is a noun, and it can also be a pronoun.
No. Nine can be a noun (a number), pronoun, or adjective. But it cannot be a preposition.
The noun 'nine' is a common noun; a general word for the number that follows eight; a general word for one of a series that follows number eight; a general word for a quantity.A proper noun is the name or title of a person, a place, or a thing; for example, Nine West (brand) women's shoes or Nine Corner Lake in the Town of Caroga, NY.
elephants
A nine letter abstract noun that starts with U is ultimatum.
A number is both a noun and an adjective.When a number is used on it's own, a number is a noun(see page nine).When a number is used to describe a noun, a number is an adjective (there are nine pages).Example sentences:Noun: The number of digits in the average American telephone number is ten.Adjective: There are ten digits in the average American telephone number.* A number may be considered to act as a pronoun when a noun is the antecedentPronoun : Bill and Ted left the house, and the two were never seen again. (two men)
The number 79 is the noun seventy nine.
The possessive form of the plural noun classes is classes'.example: The evening classes' hours are from six to nine PM.
construct - (noun) something constructed
The plural possessive form is hospitals'.
The term 'paper sheet' is a countable noun. The plural form is paper sheets.example: Nine paper sheets were attached to form one giant sheet.