The word 'confused' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to confuse. The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.
The noun forms of the verb to confuse are confusion and the gerund, confusing.
The noun form of the adjective confused is confusedness.
Babble is the act of speaking in a confused or pointless manner. The noun babble has no plural form. A collective noun is used to group things.
The adjective form of the noun cube is cubic. A variant form is cubical (not to be confused with the working area, cubicle).
Yes, it is. The word confusion is a noun form of the verb to confuse. The adjectives are confused, and more rarely confusional.
The noun form for the adjective horrible is horribleness.
Implication is the noun form of "imply."
No, confused is a verb; the past tense of the verb 'to confuse'. Example sentence: 'I am confused by your answer'. The noun form is confusion.
Babble is the act of speaking in a confused or pointless manner. The noun babble has no plural form. A collective noun is used to group things.
The adjective form of the noun cube is cubic. A variant form is cubical (not to be confused with the working area, cubicle).
The noun form for the verb malign is malinger*, one who maligns. Other noun forms are malice or malignancy.*not to be confused with the verb malinger, to pretend or exaggerate incapacity or illness to avoid duties or responsibilities; noun form malingerer, one who malingers.
The word 'confused' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to confuse. The past participle of the verb is also an adjective (a confused plot).The noun forms for the verb to confuse are confusion, and the gerund, confusing.The nouns confusion and confusing are uncountable, common, abstract noun.
Yes, it is. The word confusion is a noun form of the verb to confuse. The adjectives are confused, and more rarely confusional.
It can be, if used as a verbal noun (gerund), e.g. Lightening your hair can damage it. Otherwise, it is a verb form. *Not to be confused with "lightning" which is a noun, an electrical discharge in the atmosphere.
The female form of the noun "hero" is "heroine" - not to be confused with the homophone "heroin" - the generally illegal addictive drug.
partner = singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a person; a related noun form is partnership;wise = uncountable, common, abstract noun; a word for the manner or extent of something, the noun form of the adjective is wiseness; a related noun form is wisdom;thief = singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a person; a related noun form is thievery;mischievous: the noun form of the adjective is 'mischievousness'; a related noun form is mischief;coward = singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a person; a related noun form is cowardice;hero = singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a person; a related noun form is heroism;peculiar: the noun form of the adjective is peculiarity;poor = plural uncountable, common, concrete noun; a word for people of little means in general; the noun form of the adjective is poorness;friend = singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a person; a related noun form is friendship;clean: the noun form of the adjective is cleanness (not to be confused with the noun form of the verb cleanse, which is cleanliness); the noun forms of the verb are cleaner and the gerund, cleaning.Example use of the noun 'wise': "Answer wise, we're done."
The word 'confusing' is the present participle of the verb to confuse (confuses, confusing, confused).The noun form for the verb to confuse are confusability, confusion, and the gerund (present participle of the verb), confusing.
No. It can be a noun (a fish) or a verb (to be unstable or confused).
The noun form for the adjective horrible is horribleness.