The word 'broken' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to break (breaks, breaking, broke, broken).
The past participle of the verb is also an adjective: a broken heart, a broken teacup.
The word break is also a noun, a word for an interruption of continuity or uniformity: a break in the conversation, a break if the water main.
The noun forms for the verb to break are breakage and the gerund, breaking.
The noun form for the adjective broken is brokenness.
fracture is a noun; or a verb, as in "I will fracture this brick".
The noun thunder is a singular, common, concrete noun, a word for a thing.
The noun "wave" is a common noun.
The word emission is a noun, a common singular noun.
The noun form of the adjective 'tight' is tightness.A related noun form is the uncountable binary noun tights.
No the word broken is not a noun at all. The word broken is both a verb and an adjective.
No, 'a bird with a broken wing' is a noun phrase; a noun clause must contain a verb.noun phrase: I found a bird with a broken wing. ('broken' is an adjective describing wing)noun clause: I found a bird that had broken its wing. ('had broken' is a verb)
The noun safe is singular; safes is the plural noun."None of the safes were broken into."
No, the word 'broken' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to break (breaks, breaking, broke, broken).The past participle of the verb is also an adjective: a broken heart, a broken teacup.The word break is also a noun, a word for an interruption of continuity or uniformity: a break in the conversation, abreak if the water main.The noun forms for the verb to break are breakage and the gerund, breaking.The noun form for the adjective broken is brokenness.
The participial in this sentence is "broken." It is a present participle that functions as an adjective modifying the noun "vase."
The noun tells the reader who/what the sentence is referring to. For example: Sally rode the horse. ((It tells you WHO rode the horse.)) The chair is broken. ((It tells you WHAT is broken. )) Without the noun, you won't know who/what the sentence refers to: Rode the horse. Is broke.
No, the noun 'outlaw' is a concrete noun, a word for a person.
There is no abstract noun form of the concrete noun 'street'. The concrete noun 'street' can be used in an abstract context, for example: He lives on a street of broken dreams.
No, the word "fragile" is an adjective, not a compound noun. It describes something that is delicate or easily broken.
Yes, the noun disability is an abstract noun, a word for a condition. Something that causes a disability may be a concrete noun, such as a broken limb or blindness, but the condition of being disabled is an abstract noun.
No, 'everything' is not a noun; everything is a pronoun, an indefinite pronoun. An indefinite pronoun is a word that takes the place of noun or nouns for an unknown or unnamed thing or amount. Example use:Everything in this box is broken. Everything? Yes, every plate is cracked or broken.
Dial is a noun and a verb. Noun: The dial is broken. Verb: I dialed your number, but a strange voice answered.