The word 'casualty' is a noun, a singular, common, abstract noun; a word for anything that is lost, damaged, or destroyed as a result of an accident; a person injured or killed in an accident; a military person lost during warfare.
stoned (to death) c.1200, "to pelt with stones," from stone (n.).
early today about 150 people were injured and 30 killed when rajdhani express rammed into a local passenger
No, the word 'injured' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to injure. The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.Examples:She injured her wrist while rock climbing. (verb)I drove the injured dog right to the vet. (adjective)A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.Example: The x-ray showed that the injured dogbroke no bones. He was just badly shaken. (the pronoun 'he' takes the place of the noun 'dog' in the second sentence.
The adjective form of the word INJURY would be INJURED.
Someone that has been injured or killed in war is classified as " a casualty"
another word for victim is injured party
A good sentence using the word injured is "How badly injured were you after your fall?". Another sentence using the word might be "The firemen moved all of the injured into a makeshift hospital".
There were 33 killed including the shooter and another 23 injured.
The Mulhall, Oklahoma tornado of May 3, 1999 killed 2 people and injured another 26.
The 1840 Natchez tornado killed at least 317 people and injured another 109.
No one was killed or seriously injured in the flood.
Seven were killed and many were injured .
No, it's not.
2 were killed and 8 were injured and 2 of the injured soon died
None, there is only one word for killed there is no positive way it is just killed.
No one was killed or injured enough to be recorded. No one was killed or injured enough to be recorded.