Yes, total is a noun; total is also a verb and an adjective. Example uses:
As a noun: The total for your order is $12.
As a verb: Ask the waiter to total our check because we must go.
As an adjective: The club's total membership is over one hundred.
Yes, entireness is a noun meaning the state of being total; completeness; fullness; totality. Also, the noun entirety. Example sentence: We were shocked at the entireness of the tornado destruction.
The noun 'knowledge' is a common, uncountable, abstract noun; a word for awareness or understanding gained through experience or study; what is known in a particular field or in total; a word for a concept; a word for a thing.
There is not specific collective noun for the noun ignorance. The noun ignorance is an uncountable noun; quantities of ignorance are expressed in degrees, for example, some ignorance, much ignorance, total ignorance, etc. A term that expresses ignorance as a collective would be, 'the collective ignorance of a group' or 'the combined ignorance of a group'.
Yes, the word 'carnival' is an abstract noun, a word for a concept. A carnival is the sum total of the participants, the activities, the costumes, the food, the music, etc.
Hypochondriac can be either a noun or an adjective. Examples: Jamie is a total hypochondriac. Nellie is basically rational, but she has hypochondriac tendencies.
Yes, the noun total is used in addition. The noun total is a word for the whole number or amount of something. In addition the noun total is the sum of numbers added together.
No, the compound noun 'total eclipse' is a common noun, a general word for any total eclipse at any time.A proper noun is the name or title of a specific person, place, or thing; for example, Total Eclipse Street in Las Vegas, NV or the Bonnie Tyler song "Total Eclipse of the Heart".
Yes, the noun 'amount' is an abstract noun, a word for the total number or quantity; a word for a concept.
The noun (and adjective) form is total. Related nouns are totality and the gerund totalling.
The word amount is a noun. It can also be a verb meaning to total.
His indifference towards the situation was unsettling to those around him.
The conditioning will add to the total cost of the treatment.
The noun 'addition' is a common noun. The noun 'addition' is an uncountable, abstract noun as a word for the process of adding two or more numbers or amounts together to make a total. The noun 'addition' is a countable, abstract noun as a word for the process of adding or joining something to something else. The noun 'addition' is a countable, concrete noun as a word for an extension that is added to a building.
The noun 'addition' is a common noun. The noun 'addition' is an uncountable, abstract noun as a word for the process of adding two or more numbers or amounts together to make a total. The noun 'addition' is a countable, abstract noun as a word for the process of adding or joining something to something else. The noun 'addition' is a countable, concrete noun as a word for an extension that is added to a building.
The noun total is singular, the plural form is totals. Examples:Your total is twelve forty-four, sir.All of the precincts have reported their totals.
Yes, entireness is a noun meaning the state of being total; completeness; fullness; totality. Also, the noun entirety. Example sentence: We were shocked at the entireness of the tornado destruction.
Yes, the word 'deduction' is a noun; a singular, common, abstract noun; a word for an amount or number taken from a total; a word for something that you know from the information or evidence that you have; a word for a thing.