No, indeed is an adverb.
In French, "la Turquie" is indeed a feminine noun.
First "whistle" is a verb, as in whistle that tune. "A whistle" is a noun and being a word for something it is indeed a concrete noun.
Arthur is a name, which makes it a proper noun. Proper nouns are indeed capitalized.
If you mean Crevices, as in narrow cracks or openings, then YES it is a noun. Almost any word that you can take on it's own and put THE in front of (and it still makes sense) is a noun.
Yes, the noun 'patience' can be considered a noun phrase.A noun phrase is any word or group of words based on a noun or pronoun (without a verb) that can function in a sentence as a subject, object of a verb or a preposition. A noun phrase can be one word or many words.
Eyeball is indeed a common noun.
Eyeball is indeed a common noun.
indeed
it is indeed.
Indeed it is.
yes indeed it is
Yes the word 'dreams' is indeed a common noun
'Fade' can indeed be a noun - as in 'a fade to black' in a movie. Fade is its own noun.
indeed it is. It can be a noun, "in the beginning", but generally it's used as a verb.
In French, "la Turquie" is indeed a feminine noun.
Still can indeed be a noun. It is a noun when used to refer to a photograph (as opposed to a video). It is also a noun when referring to intense silence. This is the meaning it takes on when used in expressions such as "the still of the night."
Yes, the word July is indeed a noun. July is a month during the summer and the 7th month in the calendar year.