Yes, the word "science" is a noun, a singular, common, abstract noun; a word forthe systematic study of the nature andbehaviorof the material and physical universe;any body of knowledge organized in a systematic manner; a word for a thing.
No. Science is a noun, although it is used as an adjunct (science project, science textbook). The adjective form is "scientific."
The noun science is a common noun, a general word for any science of any kind.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, thing, or a title; for example:William Nye, aka Bill Nye, The Science Guy (PBS series)Science Street, Pittsburgh, PA or Science Street, Park Hills, MOThe Science Channel (Discovery Communications, LLC)"Naked Eggs and Flying Potatoes: Unforgettable Experiments That Make Science Fun" by Steve Spangler
It can be a noun: "Science is my favorite subject." It can be an adjective: "I am almost finished with my science project."
Science is a noun. However in contemporary popular culture science can be used as a verb, usually jokingly, e.g. "I must science!"
The noun 'science' is an uncountable noun as a word for the study and knowledge of the physical world, or an area of study that uses scientific methods (medical science, planetary science, etc.)The noun 'science' is a countable noun as a word for a scientific subject such as chemistry, physics, or biology. They are examples of sciences.
Science is a noun.
Science is a thing. It is the study of ideas and how things interact. It is a noun because it can be the subject of a sentence, and the direct object. I like science. Science is amazing.
The possessive form for the noun science is science's.
Scientist
No. It is a noun.
The noun science is a common, uncountable, abstract noun; a word for the study and knowledge of the physical world and its behavior that is based on experiments and facts that can be proved.
Paleontologist is a noun (a person). The related noun is paleontology (a science).
No. Science is a noun, although it is used as an adjunct (science project, science textbook). The adjective form is "scientific."
The noun science is a common noun, a general word for any science of any kind.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, thing, or a title; for example:William Nye, aka Bill Nye, The Science Guy (PBS series)Science Street, Pittsburgh, PA or Science Street, Park Hills, MOThe Science Channel (Discovery Communications, LLC)"Naked Eggs and Flying Potatoes: Unforgettable Experiments That Make Science Fun" by Steve Spangler
It can be a noun: "Science is my favorite subject." It can be an adjective: "I am almost finished with my science project."
Science is a noun. Word tenses apply to the verb.
No, since political science is not a proper noun.