The word 'upgrade' is both a compound noun and a compound verb; for example:
Noun: We have ordered the upgrade for your computer.
Verb: We will upgrade the rest of the department in next month's budget.
Upgrade is a noun (an upgrade) and a verb (to upgrade).
Yes, the word 'compound' is a noun, a verb, and an adjective.Examples:He lives in the cottage at the artists' compound. (noun)You will compound the problem if you lie about it. (verb)Soap is a compound mixture of ingredients. (adjective)
Basketball Game.
It is a compound noun.
The word 'laughing' is not a compound noun; it is a word+suffix. The noun 'laughing' is called a gerund (a verbal noun). A gerund is the present participle of a verb that can also perform the functions of a noun as the subject of a sentence or clause and the object of a verb or a preposition.
Upgrade is a noun (an upgrade) and a verb (to upgrade).
Yes, the word 'compound' is a noun, a verb, and an adjective.Examples:He lives in the cottage at the artists' compound. (noun)You will compound the problem if you lie about it. (verb)Soap is a compound mixture of ingredients. (adjective)
Basketball Game.
noun
No, "funny name" is not a compound verb. A compound verb is formed by combining multiple verbs together to create a new meaning, such as "carry out" or "break up". In "funny name", "funny" is an adjective describing the noun "name".
No, the word 'looks' is a verb, the word 'out' is an adverb modifying the verb.
It is a compound noun.
The term 'final game' is not a compound noun, it's an adjective noun combination, a noun phrase.A noun, a compound noun, and a noun phrase all function as a noun, as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.
The word 'rain check' is a (separated) compound noun, a noun made up of two words that forms a noun with its own meaning.
No, homework is not a verb. The word homework is a noun, an uncountable, common, compound, abstract noun, a word for a thing.
The word that usually goes with the verb to 'cheep' is the noun 'cheep'; that is cheep-cheep, a compound noun for the sound made by a bird.The homophone, the adjective 'cheap', is often paired with the noun 'skate' to form the compound noun cheapskate.
The word 'laughing' is not a compound noun; it is a word+suffix. The noun 'laughing' is called a gerund (a verbal noun). A gerund is the present participle of a verb that can also perform the functions of a noun as the subject of a sentence or clause and the object of a verb or a preposition.