Three is a noun, the cardinal number
No
Three is not an adverb. In a sentence it is a noun or an adjective.
Yes, "three-quarters" is hyphenated when used as a compound adjective before a noun, such as "three-quarters of the cake." However, when used as a standalone noun or after the verb, it is typically written as "three quarters," e.g., "I ate three quarters of the cake."
The three types of dependent clauses are adjective, adverb, and noun
The noun four is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a quantity of more than three and less than five.
The noun 'three' is a singular, common noun, a word for a thing. A number is a concrete noun when it represents people or things (three of the apples). A number is an abstract noun when it represents a concept (be there at three). When a number is used on it's own, a number is a noun (see page three). When a number is used to describe a noun, a number is an adjective (there are three pages).
The term 'three little pigs' is a noun phrase, the adjectives 'three' and 'little' describe the noun 'pigs'.The term "Three Little Pigs" is a compound, proper noun; the name of a specific folk tale.
The number three is a noun. A noun is a person, place, thing, or idea while a verb is an action or what you do.
me they she
No
Numbers are nouns and adjectives. Examples: Noun: Three is more than two. Adjective: The baby is three months old.
It can be, but it can also be a noun. He cooks dinner for three people. This is a verb. Three cooks prepared this dinner. This is a noun.
It can be, but it can also be a noun. He cooks dinner for three people. This is a verb. Three cooks prepared this dinner. This is a noun.
Three is not an adverb. In a sentence it is a noun or an adjective.
Yes, trio is a noun, a singular, common noun.
No, the noun 'baby' is a count noun; one baby, two babies, three babies, etc.
Yes, it is a plural noun, with several meanings. It can mean three identical babies.