Noun forms for the verb to contain are container, containment, and the gerund, containing.
Example uses:
Maggie brought a container of homemade cookies.
They quickly deployed barriers for the containment of the oil spill.
The containing of the outbreak reduced the spread of the infection.
withhold
A noun and a verb. "John ran" is a complete sentence because it contains both.
This is the definition of the subject of a sentence, normally a noun. The action or identity (verb) is the predicate.That is called a noun. The subject of the sentence is the noun. A noun varifies a person, place, thing or idea.
No, 'a bird with a broken wing' is a noun phrase; a noun clause must contain a verb.noun phrase: I found a bird with a broken wing. ('broken' is an adjective describing wing)noun clause: I found a bird that had broken its wing. ('had broken' is a verb)
Yes. It can be. 'Influence' can be used as either a noun or a verb."I was able to influence the outcome of the game."Here influence is a verb because it contains the action of the sentence."I have influence in the group, because I am a senior member."Here influence is a noun because it is a thing. It does not contain the action, but is an item that 'I have.'
"At the least cathartic." is not a sentence. A sentence must contain a subject (noun) and a verb. The given phrase contains neither.
The noun forms for the verb to contain are container and the gerund, containing.A related noun form is containment.
Noun
Compound subjects are contain two or more noun phrases which are form a single, larger noun phrase.
The word problem is an abstract noun.
If it does not contain a verb, it is not a complete sentence. It is a fragment.
The following sentences contain an abstract noun: B. logic D. skill
noun noun: shutteringwood in planks or strips used as a temporary structure for fencing to contain setting concrete, to support the sides of trenches, etc.a temporary structure made from planks. plural noun: shutterings
A noun and a verb. "John ran" is a complete sentence because it contains both.
No, the word 'contained' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to contain. The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.Examples:The box contained a big surprise. (verb)The boy's contained excitement caused him to wiggle around. (adjective)The noun forms of the verb 'contain' are container and the gerund, containing.A related noun form is content.
This question does not contain an intelligible sentence.
¨Only¨ is used with an eventual noun after it. ¨Only¨ can be followed by a noun, verb or an adjective. All of these examples will eventually contain a noun later in a complete sentence. ¨Alone¨ is used with nothing after.
No, it is a sentence that might contain an adjective. But the noun soccer placed before the noun ball is not considered an adjective. It is a noun adjunct or attributive noun that does not modify the ball.