The word 'crowded' is NOT a noun.
The word 'tenth' is a noun, a word for something that is number ten in a series; a word for one of ten equal parts; a word for a thing.
The nouns in the sentence are:Gina, proper noun, the name of a person (subject of the sentence);street, common noun, a word for a thing (object of the preposition 'along')The other words are:walked, verb, past tense, intransitive (it has no object);along, preposition;the, article;crowded, adjective, modifies the noun 'street'.
The comparative form of "crowded" is "more crowded."
Yes. the word "along" is a preposition and sidewalk is its object noun. The prepositional phrase is "along the crowded sidewalk" and it modifies the verb "is hurrying" saying where the hurrying is taking place.
"crowd" is the root word in "crowded." "-ed" is a suffix added to the root word "crowd" to form the past tense verb "crowded."
The noun 'crowd' is a common noun; a general word for a large group of people; a word for any crowd of any kind.A proper noun is the name or title of a specific person, place, or thing; for example, the Crowd Coffee Shop in Seoul, South Korea or "Far from the Madding Crowd", a novel by Thomas Hardy.The word 'crowd' is also a verb: crowd, crowds, crowding, crowded.
The word century is a common noun. The word tenth is functioning as an adjective (not a noun) decribing the noun century.
The common noun in your sentence is 'holidays'.
No
Yes, like crowded, it is a relative adjective. It refers to having more objects or organisms than the optimum for a given area or volume.
No, the word 'crowded' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to crowd. The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.Examples:We all crowded into Andy's car and headed for the beach. (verb)I decided to skip the crowded elevator and take the stairs. (adjective)
It can be used as a noun or adjective NOT a verb, as a noun .. as in "our tenth anniversary" and adjective; of or relating to an anniversary, for example... "an anniversary gift"
No. Crowded is an adjective. The seldom-used adverb is "crowdedly."
NO!!!! It is a noun indicating a number. The adjective would be 'tenth' or 'decimal'.
Yes, the noun 'crowd' is a collective noun as a word for a group.The noun 'crowd' is a standard collective noun for a crowd of people and a crowd of onlookers.The word 'crowd' is also a verb: crowd, crowds, crowding, crowded.
Yes, the noun 'crowd' is a common noun as a general word for a group of people. The noun 'crowd' is a collective noun for a group of people. The word 'crowd' is also a verb: crowd, crowds, crowding, crowded.
Waiting room is the compound noun in the question. The compound noun is waiting room.A compound noun is a noun made up of two or more words that form a noun with a meaning of its own.
The word 'crowd' is a common noun that can be used as a collective noun.Examples:common noun: A crowd had gathered around the bulletin board.collective noun: Some officers dispersed the crowd of gawkers.The word 'crowd' is also a verb: crowd, crowds, crowding, crowded.