The number 12 can be a noun, and also a pronoun. It is an adjective when used with another noun.
Noun A polyiamond made up of 12 triangles. pluraldodeciamonds.
Examples of abstract/concrete noun combinations are:birthday cake; the noun 'birthday' is an abstract noun as a word for a concept; the noun 'cake' is a concrete noun as a word for a type of food.card game; the noun 'card' is a concrete noun as a word for a small piece of cardboard marked with characters; the noun 'game' is an abstract noun as a word for a concept.computer science; the concrete noun 'computer' as a word for an electronic unit; the noun 'science' as a word for a concept.marriage license; the noun 'marriage' is an abstract noun as a word for a concept; the noun license is a concrete noun as a word for a document.
The word carrot is a common noun, a singular, concrete noun. Carrot is also an exact noun for the general noun vegetable.
The noun 'up' is a singular, common, noun. The noun 'up' is a concrete noun as a word for a physical direction. The noun 'up' is an abstract noun as a word for a positive situation or period of time.
Feet is a plural noun. Foot is a singular noun.
The compound noun 'high school' is a concrete noun as a word for a building that houses grades 9 - 12 (in the US); a word for a physical thing.The compound noun 'high school' is an abstract noun as a word for any of the grade levels 9 - 12 (in the US); a word for a concept.
Yes the word noon is a noun. Noon is at midday everyday.
Noun A polyiamond made up of 12 triangles. pluraldodeciamonds.
Yes, the word 'years' is a noun, the plural form of the noun year, a common, abstract noun, a word for a thing.
No, it is not. It is a noun for a time (middle of the night, 12 PM), and can also be an adjective/ noun adjunct in terms such as midnight train or midnight sun.
The word content can be used as a noun, verb or adjective. As an adjective, I can recall 14 synonyms. As a verb, about 18. As a noun about 12
It can be either a noun or adjective.When used by itself, it means 12 of some item (the object is implicit)Noun: I needed 5 eggs, so I bought a dozen.When used before a noun, it is a numeral adjective (meaning 12 of some item or thing).Adjective: A dozen cats were sitting outside my door.
Yes, total is a noun; total is also a verb and an adjective. Example uses:As a noun: The total for your order is $12.As a verb: Ask the waiter to total our check because we must go.As an adjective: The club's total membership is over one hundred.
The gerund painting is a countable noun, as in "There are 12 paintings in this room."
The -s form of the verb is used when he/she/it or a singular noun is the subject of the sentence.We like ice cream. compare with - He likesice creamThey eat lunch at 12:00. The policeman eatslunch at 12:00. (singular noun subject).They have eaten lunch. She haseaten lunch.
Yes, both a year (1934) and a number (12) are nouns. Both the digits 1934 or 12 and the words, nineteen thirty four or twelve are nouns.
The word gross is a verb (gross, grosses, grossing, grossed), an adjective (gross, grosser, grossest), and a noun (gross, grosses).The noun gross is a singular, common noun; a word for an entire body or amount, as of income, before necessary deductions have been made; or a count of 144 of something (a gross of pencils).The noun form for the verb to gross is the gerund, grossing.The noun form for the adjective gross is grossness.