answersLogoWhite

0

No, the word 'will' is a noun (will, wills) and a verb (will, wills, willing, willed).

  • The noun 'will' is a word for a legal document that instructs how a person's property is to be divided after death; a word for a person's determination to do what is necessary to achieve what they want; a word for a thing.
  • The verb 'will' is to intend, desire, or wish something to happen; to try to make something happen by the exercise of the mind; to bequeath something to someone in a formal document (a will).
  • The verb 'will' is a modal verb expressing future tense; expressing probability or expectation; expressing inevitability; expressing desire, consent or willingness of a main verb.
A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.

Examples:

Sue has the will to succeed. It willtake her where she wants to go.

  • The noun 'will' is the direct object of the verb 'has'.
  • The modal verb 'will' expresses expectation for the verb 'take'.
  • The pronoun 'her' takes the place of the noun 'Sue' in the second sentence as the direct object of the verb 'will take'.

Uncle Will said he intends to will his estate to the university.

  • The noun 'Will' (capital W) is a proper noun, the name of a person; subject of the sentence.
  • The pronouns 'he' and 'his' takes the place of the subject noun 'Uncle Will'.
  • The verb 'will' is the main verb, meaning to 'bequeath'.
User Avatar

Wiki User

8y ago

What else can I help you with?