No, the word 'strange' is not a noun. The word 'strange' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun.
The abstract noun form of the adjective 'strange' is strangeness.
A related noun form is stranger, a concrete noun as a word for a person.
Strange is never used as a noun. It can only be used as an adjective.
The noun form for the adjective strange is strangeness.
No, strange is an adjective, a word that describes a noun. It is sometimes used as a noun and it's a common noun. Example uses:Adjective: I watched that strange program on TV last night.Noun: That little shop has everything strange and interesting.
The noun forms for the adjective strange are stranger, strangeness and sometimes strange.Example uses:Noun: I gave the stranger directions to get back on the interstate.Noun: The strangeness of a new house or apartment usually lasts about a month.Noun: The haunted house tour specializes in the strangeand the scary.Adjective: We saw a strange cat sitting on our steps expectantly.
Yes the word grotesque can be a noun. It is primarily used as an adjective.
"Another animal with a strange name" is the subject. "is the Platypus" is the predicate. "Another" & "with a strange name" all modify the noun "animal". "is" is the verb. "Platypus" is a proper noun, but in this sentence it is used as an indirect object in the predicate, and refers to the "animal with a strange name" in the subject. "animal with a strange name" is the object of the sentence. The sentence would be diagramed thusly... subject | predicate Another animal with a strange name | is the Platypus. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
Strange is the positive degree. The comparative is stranger (more strange). The superlative is strangest (most strange).
No, strange is an adjective, a word that describes a noun. It is sometimes used as a noun and it's a common noun. Example uses:Adjective: I watched that strange program on TV last night.Noun: That little shop has everything strange and interesting.
The noun form of the adjective 'strange' is strangeness.A related noun is stranger.
The noun forms for the adjective strange are stranger, strangeness and sometimes strange.Example uses:Noun: I gave the stranger directions to get back on the interstate.Noun: The strangeness of a new house or apartment usually lasts about a month.Noun: The haunted house tour specializes in the strangeand the scary.Adjective: We saw a strange cat sitting on our steps expectantly.
Yes the word grotesque can be a noun. It is primarily used as an adjective.
"Strange story" is a common noun because it refers to a general type of story that is unusual or bizarre.
"Another animal with a strange name" is the subject. "is the Platypus" is the predicate. "Another" & "with a strange name" all modify the noun "animal". "is" is the verb. "Platypus" is a proper noun, but in this sentence it is used as an indirect object in the predicate, and refers to the "animal with a strange name" in the subject. "animal with a strange name" is the object of the sentence. The sentence would be diagramed thusly... subject | predicate Another animal with a strange name | is the Platypus. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
A rhyming pair for unusual stove could be STRANGE RANGE.
The word 'how' is principally an adverb and a conjunction. It can also be used colloquially as a noun. (For example 'She never discovered the how and the why of that evening's strange events.') It can never be a verb nor an adjective.
The word 'stranger' is a noun and an adjective.The noun 'stranger' is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for someone who is neither a friend nor an acquaintance; a foreigner, newcomer, or outsider; someone who is unaccustomed to or unacquainted with something; a word for a person.The adjective 'stranger' is the comparative form of the adjective 'strange'; a word used to describe a noun.Example uses:That man is no stranger, he's my brother. (noun)A stranger tale has never been told. (adjective)
The word 'stranger' is a noun, a word for someone you don't know or someone who is not familiar with a given area; a word for a person.The word 'stranger' is also the comparative form of the adjective 'strange'.The noun form of the adjective strange is strangeness.
The verb is are strange is an describing word which are called adjectives and kangeroos would be an common noun .
No. Onomatopoeia is the adjective used to describe a word that is a sound. For example: Oink is an onomatopoeia, and so is moo. So the actual word "onomatopoeia" is not a verb, but the words that it describes can be. Onomatopoeia could also be a noun. "The cow made a strange onomatopoeia."="The cow made a strange noise"