Yes. "The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few."
No, it is just an ordinary noun. A proper noun is a name, and it needs a caaptial letter.
A proper noun and the first word in a sentence both must be capitalized.
Yes, a task or a job is a noun. Performing them would be a verb.
Yes, the noun 'resourcefulness' is an abstract noun, a word for an ability to act effectively or imaginatively; an ability to meet the needs of a situation; an ability to creatively cope with difficulties; a word for a concept.
The abstract noun for "necessary" is "necessity." It refers to the state or quality of being essential or required. In various contexts, necessity can describe fundamental needs or obligations that must be met.
No, a noun only needs an adjective when the speaker wishes to describe the noun.
There is no possessive noun in the phrase "needed Christian for research".A possessive noun is a noun that indicates that something in the sentence belongs to that noun. A possessive noun is formed by adding an apostrophe s ('s) or just an apostrophe (') to the end of the sentence.Examples:a Christian's research (the research of a Christian)the Christians' needs (the needs of the Christians)the research's needs (the needs of the research)researchers' needs (the needs of researchers)Note: The noun Christian is a proper noun. Proper nouns are always capitalized.
No, it is a noun. A proper noun is a noun that needs an upper case, such as a name or place.
The word "needs" is a verb and a noun.The verb "needs" is the third person, singular present of the verb to need.Example: Junior needs a new pair of shoes.The noun "needs" is the plural form of the singular noun need.Example: The church has an emergency fund for the needs of the parishioners.
No, it is just an ordinary noun. A proper noun is a name, and it needs a caaptial letter.
"Needs" can act as either a verb or a noun. As a verb, it is used as the third person singular form as in, "He needs help." As a noun, it can act as a plural count noun: "He has many needs."
No, it is just an ordinary noun. A proper noun is a name, and it needs a caaptial letter.
needs is the third person singular form of need. Need is a regular verb.Use needs with he/she/it or singular noun subject egShe needs to go home.It needs to rain soon.The teacher needs to see you. (singular noun subject)
A proper noun and the first word in a sentence both must be capitalized.
Yes, it is a noun. It is the noun form of the adjective thoughtful.
In the sentence "Flaming Carrot always has flippers for when he needs to swim," the noun clause is "when he needs to swim." This clause functions as the object of the preposition "for," indicating the purpose of the flippers.
This is not a question. It needs a noun to know what "it" is.