You can change the sentence to "He has pride in his motherland." This maintains the original meaning while using the noun form of "proud."
The word -proud- is an adjective. Comparable forms for adjectives are comparative and superlative. As you have phrased the question, -more prouder- is the comparative form of proud. And it is incorrect grammatically. The general rule (although there are exceptions) is: One syllable words: add an -er- at the end. Two syllable words: add either an -er- at the end or the word -more- before it. Three syllable words: add the word -more- before the word. Since -proud- is a one syllable word, the proper comparative is -prouder-. -More prouder- is not only incorrect, but it's also redundant.
The abstract noun form of the adjective 'proud' is proudness:"The proudness of the people..."A related abstract noun is pride:"The pride of the people..."
You can't. Not that I know of, anyways. You can only change his form in Platinum with rotom's key or something.
279/295 is in its simplest form.
Yes, a rock can change. It's not as easy to change a rock as it is to change a marshmallow, but it can be done.
The term 'the proud' is a short form for 'those who are proud' or 'the proud ones'. The term 'the proud' functions a a noun phrase in a sentence.
To change a sentence into a negative form, you can add a negation word such as "not" or use a negative verb form like "is not" or "do not" depending on the context of the sentence. For example, "She is happy" can become "She is not happy."
The comparative form for the adjective 'proud' is prouder.The superlative form is proudest.
There is no plural form. Do and Do not are verbs
No. Proud is an adjective. The adverb form is "proudly."
there were calves in my back yard.
"Pride" is a noun and a verb and as such does not have a comparative form. The adjective "prideful" has the comparative "more prideful", while the adjective "proud" has the comparative "prouder."
The word 'proud' is not a verb. The word 'proud' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun (a proud parent or a proud trophy winner).The noun form for the adjective proud is proudness.A related noun form is pride.
You would say, "What is this in English?"
a thorough or dramatic change in the form apperance or character
we were not to the eats rice
"Proud parents" is correct. Plural possessive form does not require an apostrophe before the "s" when the noun is already in plural form.