No. Broke is usually used as a verb but sometimes by uneducated speakers as an adjective as in "my broke(n) computer." Brake can be a noun.
Yes, the word 'pandemonium' is a noun, a word for a very noisy and confused situation; a word for a thing. In the sentence, "Pandemonium broke out.", the noun pandemonium is the subject.
Mr. (noun) Hernandez (noun) angrily (adverb) broke (verb) his (adjective) new (adjective) pencil (noun)
No, "broke" is not a noun. It is typically used as an adjective to describe someone who lacks money or resources.
The word 'noun' is not a verb. The word 'noun' is a noun, a word for a thing.
No the word notes is a plural noun. The singular noun is note.
The noun form for the adjective broke is brokenness. The word broke is also the past tense of the verb to break.
Yes, as in I broke the bone
No. The word spike is a noun and Spike is a proepr noun (a name). Broke is the past tense of the verb 'to break.'
The noun 'break out' is a singular, common, compound, abstract noun; a word for an eruption of something on the skin; occurrences of an infectious disease; an escape from confinement, monotony, or conformity.
Yes, the word 'pandemonium' is a noun, a word for a very noisy and confused situation; a word for a thing. In the sentence, "Pandemonium broke out.", the noun pandemonium is the subject.
In the sentence "Mr. Hernandez angrily broke his new pencil," "Mr." is a noun (title), "Hernandez" is a proper noun, "angrily" is an adverb, "broke" is a verb, "his" is a possessive pronoun, "new" is an adjective, and "pencil" is a common noun. Each word serves to provide specific information about the action and the subject.
Mr. (noun) Hernandez (noun) angrily (adverb) broke (verb) his (adjective) new (adjective) pencil (noun)
Broke can be an adjective and a verb.
He can't control his anger.
No, "broke" is not a noun. It is typically used as an adjective to describe someone who lacks money or resources.
The word 'despair' is both a noun (uncountable) and a verb (despair, despairs, despairing, despaired).The noun 'despair' is a word for a complete loss of hope; a person or thing that is the cause of a complete loss of hope.
No, the word 'broken' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to break (breaks, breaking, broke, broken).The past participle of the verb is also an adjective: a broken heart, a broken teacup.The word break is also a noun, a word for an interruption of continuity or uniformity: a break in the conversation, abreak if the water main.The noun forms for the verb to break are breakage and the gerund, breaking.The noun form for the adjective broken is brokenness.