No, "disquieting" is an adjective that describes something that causes unease or disturbance. It is not a noun.
"Disquieting" is an adjective.
The word "disquieting" is an adjective.
The word 'noun' is not a verb. The word 'noun' is a noun, a word for a thing.
Yes, its a noun in the plural.Yes, its a noun in the plural.Yes, its a noun in the plural.Yes, its a noun in the plural.Yes, its a noun in the plural.Yes, its a noun in the plural.Yes, its a noun in the plural.Yes, its a noun in the plural.Yes, its a noun in the plural.
It is a noun
"Disquieting" is an adjective.
The Disquieting Muses was created in 1916.
The word "disquieting" is an adjective.
The party next door was disquieting to the rest of the neighborhood who were trying to fall asleep.
I have received some disquieting news. Fred has been killed by a hippopotamus.
The disquieting girl annoyed the boy all day. The news disquieted him.
Adjective
"The sound of the wind was most disquieting, and Celindine felt afraid and nervous to step foot outside her warm and cosy room."
The neighbor's loud music was very disquieting to me when I was trying to fall asleep.
His offbeat humor was a bit disquieting.
Distressing, disquieting or disconcerting, dick.
Scary, frightening, alarming, unsettling, disquieting, disturbing, freaky, ghostly, nightmarish