Yes, the word 'china' is a noun. The noun 'china' is a common noun when used for tableware, household objects and the ceramic material that these objects are made from. The noun 'China' is a proper noun when used as the name of the country.
A noun used to describe another noun is called an attributive noun (or noun adjunct).Examples of nouns used to describe the noun diamond are:marquis diamondfair trade diamondbaseball diamondengagement diamond
No, it is not a noun. It is an interjection, an exclamation of triumph or realization.
No the word raw is not a noun. It is an adjective.
No, it is an adjective.Although daily is normally used as an adjective, it can also be used as a noun. According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the noun daily means a newspaper published every day except Sunday; or (in Britain, now obsolescent) a domestic cleaner.When used as a noun it is a common noun.
The word 'hard' is an adjective (a hard floor, hard water) or an adverb (push hard, work hard), but not a noun.The noun form of the adjective 'hard' is hardness.
Hard is an adjective (tough, or difficult). The noun form is hardness, which is more often used as the opposite of softness.
No, "hard" is an adjective, used to describe the level of difficulty of something.
Yes, "hard worker" should be hyphenated when used as an adjective before a noun, as in "She is a hard-worker."
Yes, the word 'pickaxe' (or pickax) is a noun, a joined, compound noun; a word for a tool used for breaking up hard surfaces.
The noun form of the adjective 'hard' is hardness.
The abstract noun for the adjective hard is hardness.
Labour can be used as both a noun and a verb. As a noun, it refers to work, especially hard physical work. As a verb, it means to work hard or make great effort.
No the word hardworking is an adjective not a noun. A noun form is hardworker.
Yes, it is. Hardness is the noun. Hard can also be used as an adverb, because the form hardly has assumed an entirely different meaning.
no,because hard is not because you cant do it
Yes, you should capitalize "Deaf" when referring to the Deaf culture and community. "Hard of hearing" is generally not hyphenated when used as a descriptor before a noun, but it can be hyphenated when used as a compound modifier before a noun (e.g., she is hard-of-hearing).