Perhaps Gandhi's answer will help.
He was asked after visiting and touring America, what impressed him most.
He answered,"the size of their garbage cans".
Yes, the noun western is an abstract noun, a word for a book, movie, or TV program with a background of the western US of the 1800s and early 1900s. The word western is also an adjective, a word that describes a noun.
Western would most often be an adjective, ie: The Rockies are in the western U.S. However, if you are talking about a kind of movie, it would be a noun. ie: John Wayne was famous for his many westerns.
A viewer crying at the end of a particularly sad movie - APEX
When it refers to a specific region or is part of a proper noun. when referring to a direction it is not capitalized. He lived in the West. He traveled west. He lived in West L.A.
If I am not mistaken, 'True Grit' is a fictional American Western novel, set in the 1800s. The contraction "ain't" was coined in 1706, but it may not have been the first.
The movie Gandhi was about his life and how he changed India.
Ben Kingsley
anita kapoor
Ben Kingsley
documentary.
In the movie "Gandhi," 189 was his prisoner number in South Africa.
India.
Richard Attenborough.
A Tagalog movie is one in the Filipino language of Tagalog. These movies have existed for a number of decades and recently have been getting more notice in the Western hemisphere.
A western movie is called 'un western' in French.
john ben kisley
yes