The actual word interjection is a noun. It is similar to the words remark or comment.
However, with certain suffixes, the part of speech can change.
Interjected - verb
Interjectional - adjective
Interjectionally - adverb
Interjections (also a noun) is a part of speech in itself. Words that sounds surprised or excited are usually interjections.
Examples:
Oh my gosh!
Darn it!
Ooooouch!
Wow!
No, the word "hooray" is not a noun. It is an interjection or exclamation used to express joy or excitement.
"Wait" can be used as a verb or as a noun, but not as an adverb, preposition, or interjection. It is a verb when indicating the action of delaying or remaining in expectation, and a noun when referring to a period of waiting.
"Good morning" is considered a greeting or an interjection, not a traditional part of speech like a noun or verb.
The word there'll is a contraction, a shortened form of the pronoun 'there' and the verb (or auxiliary verb) 'will', used to express the future tense of a main verb.The contraction functions as the subject and verb (or auxiliary verb) of a sentence or a clause.Note: The word "there" is a pronoun only when it introduces a sentence or a clause. The word "there" also functions as an interjection, an adverb, and a noun. The noun "there" is a word for a place.Examples:There will be rain this afternoon.ORThere'll be rain this afternoon.I wonder if there will be practice today.ORI wonder if there'll be practice today.
The word 'noun' is not a verb. The word 'noun' is a noun, a word for a thing.
The word 'bachelor' is a noun, a word for an unmarried male adult; a word for a person.
Thought is not an article or an interjection. It can be used as a noun (a thought) or a verb (past tense of think).
- interjection / verb / noun goodbye - interjection / noun
noun.
adjective, adverb, interjection, noun, verb (used with object) OK.
The word 'students' is a noun, the plural form of the noun 'student' a word for a person.A noun is a word for a person, a place, or a thing.A noun functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.
No, "peace" is not an adverb.The word "peace" is a noun, a verb and an interjection.
The word glory is a noun, a verb, and an interjection. Examples: Noun: The glory of a summer morning at the lake is priceless. Verb: The team had a moment to glory in the impossible goal, but still had the match to finish. Interjection: Glory be, I thought I'd never find my ring again!
No, the word "go" is not an adverb.The word "go" is a verb, a noun, an interjection and an adjective.
The word "nuts" is not a verb at all. It is fundamentally a plural noun, sometimes used as an interjection to signify strong defiance or disagreement.
The word check is a noun, a verb, and an interjection. Example uses: Noun: The check is in the mail. Noun: There's a bed check at ten PM. Verb: I'll check the price at both stores. Verb: You can check off each book you've read. Interjection: Did you finish your homework? Check!
No, the word "hooray" is not a noun. It is an interjection or exclamation used to express joy or excitement.