verb
The noun 'measles' is a common, concrete, uncountable noun, a word for a disease, a word for a physical thing.
The origin is that it is another word for the German measles or Rubella wich is a skin rash.
Measles is a highly contagious viral infection that primarily affects children. It is characterized by symptoms such as high fever, cough, runny nose, rash, and red, watery eyes. Vaccination is the most effective way to prevent measles.
Measles refers to a viral disease and, while the word is plural in structure, it is singular in meaning.
The word "and" is not a noun at all. The word "and" is a conjunction.
The noun 'measles' is a common, concrete, uncountable noun, a word for a disease, a word for a physical thing.
The noun 'measles' is an uncountable noun.The noun measles is plural in form but functions as a singular noun.Examples: He had a case of the measles.
The noun measles, a word for a viral disease, is plural in structure but singular in meaning. The noun measles is an uncountable (mass) noun.The word "measles" is plural when referring to the spots on the body and singular when you have measles as a disease. So you may have to say "cases of measles" to pluralize multiple episodes of the illness.For example, "His measles were bothering him." or "We cannot handle all the measles cases." It seems you have to throw in an extra word to differentiate between the spots and the outbreaks. Do you have an example sentence?Although measles is a plural noun, it is treated as singular.
'Measles' is a singular noun.
The noun measles is a concrete noun; although it can't be seen by the naked eye, the virus can be detected and seen with the use of instruments; measles is a physical thing.
I thought measles was already the singular word. For example, "He has measles." Measles is already plural as well. For example, "They all have measles."
The word 'rabies' is an uncountable noun, similar to measles, diabetes, arthritis, etc. The noun 'rabies' is expressed as a case of rabies or cases of rabies.
No, "measles" is not capitalized unless it is at the beginning of a sentence or part of a proper noun (e.g. German Measles).
We had to cancel the party because she had measles. Measles is not something fun to have. He was sick with measles.
(noun or noun adjunct) "The disease spread rapidly and there was no cure." "Measles is a viral disease that usually affects children." "The disease organism in many of the cases was a mutated bacteria."
The origin is that it is another word for the German measles or Rubella wich is a skin rash.
The English word for "tigdas" is measles.