Yes, the word 'fifty' is a noun, a singular, common noun; a word for a thing.
The word 'fifty' is also an adjective; for example, fiftydollars, fifty people, etc.
The word "fifty" is a noun when referring to the number fifty, whereas it is an adjective when describing something as fifty in quantity.
A compound noun is a noun made up of two or more words merged into one word with a meaning of its own. There are three types of compound nouns:open spaced: tennis shoe, front door, paint brush, bus stophyphenated: mother-in-law, fifty-five, six-pack, part-timeclosed: bathtub, Baseball, houseboat, newspaper, lunchbox
Yes, the word living is a noun, a verbal noun called a gerund. The present participle verb form ending in -ing is a verb, an adjective, and a gerund. Examples: Noun: It's summertime and the living is easy. Verb: We've been living here nigh on fifty years now. Adjective: The living conditions at the camp are primitive.
The noun hand-me-down is a singular, common, compound noun. There are three types of compound nouns:open spaced: tennis shoe, front door, paint brushhyphenated: mother-in-law, fifty-five, six-packclosed: bathtub, baseball, houseboat
The plural of fifty is fifties. As in "the fifties were a good decade".
The term 'fifty satchels' is made up the adjective'fifty' and the noun 'satchels'.
The plural form for the noun fifty is fifties.
The word "fifty" is a noun when referring to the number fifty, whereas it is an adjective when describing something as fifty in quantity.
The word 'fifty-fifty' is a compound adjective and adverb.The adjective 'fifty-fifty' describes a noun as shared equally.Example: The agreement was a fifty-fifty share of the profit.The adverb 'fifty-fifty' modifies a verb, an adjective, or an another adverb as equally.Example: The votes were split fifty-fifty.
Yes, the word 'menu' is a countable noun; one menu or an order of fifty menus.
No, "fifty stars" is not an adverb. It is a noun phrase describing a specific quantity of stars. An adverb is a word that modifies a verb, adjective, or another adverb by providing more information about how, when, or where something happens.
Feet is a noun.
noun or verb noun: a dash is a hyphen. Also noun: let's run the fifty-yard dash. verb: I'm going to dash over to the store.
The noun height uses the adjective "high."The adjective for the noun height is high. Example:The height of the dresser is fifty inches; it's a very high dresser.
"The fifties" is an English equivalent of the French phrase la cinquantaine.Specifically, the feminine singular definite article lameans "the". The feminine noun cinquantaine translates as "about fifty, fifty plus, over fifty" as well as "fifties". The pronunciation will be "lah seh-kaw-tehn" in French.
The adjective for the noun height is high. Example:The height of the dresser is fifty inches; it's a very high dresser.
I can not find it! (verb)A find in the victim's phone records was an important clue. (noun)You can find the answer on page fifty-two. (verb)We made a real find at the yard sale. (noun)