Remains can be a noun or a verb. Example uses:
As a noun: The remains of the party are still scattered around the yard, we need to clean it up.
As a verb: My age remains a secret.
The plural form of "remains" is "remains." The word remains is an uncountable noun and does not change in the plural form.
Legion is a noun. it does not have a tense
Hibernate can function as both a verb and a noun. As a verb, it refers to the act of an animal entering a state of dormancy during the winter months. As a noun, it represents the period during which an animal remains in this dormant state.
Yes, the word tell is a noun, a word for a large mound resulting from the accumulation of the remains of a succession of previous settlements.
The noun 'bungalow' is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a small house or cottage usually having a single story and sometimes an additional attic story; a word for a thing.
Yes, it can be a noun, although remains is synonymous with singular nouns a\such as corpse, body, or carcass. The word remains can also be a verb form of the verb to remain.
Yes, it is a noun. It means a succession of rulers or a family that remains in power.
The plural form of "remains" is "remains." The word remains is an uncountable noun and does not change in the plural form.
Yes, the word ruins is a plural noun. The singular noun is ruin.
Being a proper noun (name) it remains the same.
"Remains" can be either a verb or a noun. The verb meaning is more common and is the third person singular present tense form of "remain". However, "remains" also can be a noun meaning whatever is left of something that has changed or aged significantly, most particularly a human corpse.
Remain is usually a verb, as in "Five contestants remain." As a noun, it is usually plural (remains), as in "The cremated remains were placed in an urn."
"Chelsea " being a proper noun (a name) remains the same.
Being a proper noun "Pakistan" remains the same in German.
That is the correct spelling of the noun "introvert" (one who remains private or alone).
The noun 'dinosaur' is a concrete noun, a word for a physical creature. Although there are no dinosaurs living today, there are many physical remains of those that were once alive.
No, the noun "uncle" is a common noun, a general word for a male relative.A proper noun is the name of a specific uncle, for example, "Uncle Leo is crazy."Used as, "My older uncle, Leo, is crazy," then it remains a common noun.