Yes the word specialist is a noun. It is a common noun.
The abstract noun for "specialist" is "specialization." It refers to the process or state of becoming specialized in a particular area or field. This term encompasses the skills, knowledge, and expertise that a specialist possesses within their domain.
The word 'special' is a noun; a word for a food at a restaurant, a program on TV, a featured item for sale, a particular train or bus scheduled, etc.The noun form for the adjective 'special' is specialness. Other noun forms are specialist, specialty, and specialization.
Such a specialist is known by the title of podiatrist or chiropodist.
A geologist
A specialist Doctor Who practices in "Dermatology", a Dermatologist.
No. Specialist is a noun. It means someone in a specialized field or position.
The abstract noun for "specialist" is "specialization." It refers to the process or state of becoming specialized in a particular area or field. This term encompasses the skills, knowledge, and expertise that a specialist possesses within their domain.
Experts.
When you write a sentence with specialist in a sentence make sure to use it as a noun. An example is: The specialist observed the ancient artifacts to form a hypothesis.
The term 'foot specialist' is a compoundnoun, a word made of two or more individual words that merge to form a noun with a meaning of its own.
A concrete noun is were u can do atleast one of the 5 senses. A abstract noun is were u cant do any of the 5 senses to it. Ex.of a concrete noun is horse. Ex. of a abstract noun is love.
noun 1.a specialist in phonetics or in some aspect of phonetics. 2.a dialectologist.
The word 'special' is a noun; a word for a food at a restaurant, a program on TV, a featured item for sale, a particular train or bus scheduled, etc.The noun form for the adjective 'special' is specialness. Other noun forms are specialist, specialty, and specialization.
their are many synonyms for specialist...it could be... ace,adept,attending physician,authority,connoisseur,consultant,devotee,doctor,guru*,old hand,old pro,pro*,professional,pundit,sage,savant,scholar,technician,veteran,virtuoso..and etc.. SO THAT'S IT...MAY IT HELP...(^_^)
The verb has the general adjective "communicative" but this is seldom used. Often the noun form communication(s) is used as a noun adjunct (e.g. communication problem, communications specialist). Also rarely used are the forms "communicational" and "communicatory."
there is roark rock specialist, gardenia grass specialist, maylene fighting specialist, crasher wake water specialist, fantina ghost specialist, Byron steel type specialist, Candice ice type specialist, lastly volkner electric specialist. that satisfy?
specialist