indulgence
The verb form of the noun luxury is luxuriate.
Indulgent is an adjective. The noun form is indulgence and the verb form is to indulge.
Most do in English: An article (a, an, the) comes before a noun. Determiners "this" and "that" also precede a noun, as do possessives and numerical determiners.
A noun form is dignity.
Not necessarily. In fact, there need not be any noun in a sentence. For example, "I love you" is a proper sentence which has no noun - only two pronouns and a verb.In "I love Sam", the noun - Sam - comes after the verb.In "Sam loves you", the noun - Sam - comes before the verb.
indulgement
indulgent
Yes, it is a plural noun. The verb is indulge and the adjective indulgent.
Those who spend money extravagantly (adverb) and indulge in extravagance (noun) are called extravagant. (noun)
The verb form of the noun luxury is luxuriate.
Indulgent is an adjective. The noun form is indulgence and the verb form is to indulge.
Most do in English: An article (a, an, the) comes before a noun. Determiners "this" and "that" also precede a noun, as do possessives and numerical determiners.
Samsung galaxy indulge is better because it has 4G.
The noun form is arbitration.
"Starvation" is a noun-- an abstract noun. It comes from the verb "to starve."
An adjective comes before a noun or a pronoun to tell more about it.
The noun form is description, a common, singular, abstract noun.