The nouns are form and foe.
The word strident is an adjective, a word that describes a noun.
The noun form is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word forthe shape and structure of something; a word for a thing. (The word form is also a verb: form, forms, forming, formed)
The noun foe is a singular, common, abstract noun; a word for an enemy or opponent; a word for a person.
No. How is an adverb, conjunction or noun. It can form clauses (e.g. how we work). But it is not a preposition.
a/an/the a dog/ an apple/ the bus
Numbers are nouns and adjectives. Examples: Noun: Three is more than two. Adjective: The baby is three months old.
Yes, "mother-in-law" is a compound noun made up of three words: mother, in, and law.
The noun form of the adjective obedient is obedience.
The student had a strident tone to his writing.
Yes, right of way, or right-of-way is a compound noun; three words combined to form a word with its own meaning.
The noun verbiage is the use of too many or excessively technical words. The noun hippopotomonstrosesquippedaliophobia is the fear of long words
The plural form of the noun go is goeswe all had a go on the swings and three goes on the slide
Verb form: interrogate Noun form: no clue
No, they are adjectives, they describe the quality of a noun, and not the noun itself.an intelligent studenta friendly neighbora famous actorThe noun form for intelligent is intelligence.The noun form for friendly is friendliness.The noun form for famous is famousness.
The two words together form a proper noun, or, more correctly, a proper noun phrase. Mrs Gries is the name of a specific person, so both words take an initial capital.Note: the words proper noun do not take initial capitals, as they form a common noun phrase.
Yes, the word 'moonlight' is a compound noun, a noun made up of two or more words that form a noun with its own meaning.
Yes it is. It has the words "live" and "stock" or the words "lives" and "tock".
No. How is an adverb, conjunction or noun. It can form clauses (e.g. how we work). But it is not a preposition.
Yes, the word 'sign language' is a noun, a compound noun, a noun made up of two words that form a noun with a meaning of its own.
a/an/the a dog/ an apple/ the bus