Argument, arguerer, and the gerund, arguing are the corresponding noun forms for the verb to argue.
Problematic and problematical are the corresponding adjectives to the noun problem. The corresponding adverb is problematically.
Synonyms for the noun right are:authoritycorrectnessdominionfitnessjusticemoralityprerogativeproprietySynonyms for the noun wrong are:affrontcrimeinjuryinjusticeinequitymisdeedoffensesin
Able is an adjective, the corresponding noun is ability and the corresponding adverb is ably.
No solution is a noun. Solve is the corresponding verb.
The corresponding noun to the adjective numismatic(meaning relatic to money, coins or medals) is numismatics, or numismatology (meaning the the study of coins or medals). Although it ends in -s numismatics is a singular noun.*Although a coin collector may be a numismatist, there is no formal corresponding noun numismatism.)
The corresponding noun for the adjective sarcastic is sarcasticness.A related noun form is sarcasm.
The noun form is choice.
The corresponding noun for the adjective gentle is gentleness. A related noun form is gentility.
The noun form for the adjective unhappy is unhappiness.
No, the word 'argue' is a verb (argue, argues, arguing, argued).The noun forms of the verb to argue are argument and the gerund, arguing.
The corresponding adjective for the noun "influence" is "influential".
No, the word argue is a verb (argue, argues, arguing, argued). The noun forms for the verb are argurer, one who argues, and argument.
One answer: It is both verb or noun ---------------------- Another answer: "Argue" is a verb; it is not a noun in standard English. The nouns that relate to "argue" include "argument" and "arguer" but "argue" is a verb.
The verb avert does not have a corresponding noun, it does, however, have a corresponding adjective: avertable.
Problematic and problematical are the corresponding adjectives to the noun problem. The corresponding adverb is problematically.
Argue is only a verb.
"Triumphant" is not a noun. The corresponding noun is "triumph"