The noun forms or the verb to consist are consistency and the gerund, consisting.
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.
thin isnt a noun you pleb!
An appositive is a phrase, usually a noun phrase, that renames another phrase or noun. A noun phrase is a group of words taking the job of a noun in a sentence. Noun phrases consist of the main noun and any modifiers.
A complex noun phrase is a noun phrase that includes one or more modifiers or determiners. It can consist of multiple words or clauses that provide additional information about the noun. Complex noun phrases help provide more details and context about the noun they are describing.
Gerund phrases consist of a gerund (a verb form ending in -ing that functions as a noun) along with its modifiers and complements. They can serve as subjects, objects, or complements in sentences. For example, "Swimming in the pool" is a gerund phrase where "swimming" acts as a noun.
A noun phrase can consist of two or more nouns. A compound noun can consist of two or more nouns. A noun phrase is any word or group of words based on a noun or pronoun (without a verb) that can function in a sentence as a subject, object of a verb or a preposition. A noun phrase can be one word or many words. A noun phrase may also contain articles, adjectives, prepositions, and conjunctions. Examples: the board meeting, my mother's homemade cookies, a symposium on translating dead languages, etc. A noun phrase may be a collective noun phrase. A collective noun is a word used to group people or things taken together as one whole in a descriptive way. Examples: a crowd of people, a herd of cattle, a bushel of apples, etc. A noun phrase may be a noun used to describe another noun. The noun used to describe another noun is called an attributive noun or a noun adjunct. Examples: vinaigrette dressing, glass beads, vacation destination, etc. A compound noun is a word made of two or more individual words that merge to form a noun with a meaning of its own. Examples: bus stop, mother-in-law, bathtub ring, etc.
what does the ody consist of? what does the body consist of?
It consist of asthenosphere
The form is "consist/consists".
consist is a present tense
Generally, the answer would be the subject, a sentence must have a subject and a verb. However, the exception is an imperative sentence, when the subject 'you' is implied, not expressed; for example, "Help!", "Watch out!", or "Look!" A noun clause may consist of a subject noun or pronoun and a verb but as an incomplete idea, it is not a sentence.
No, the word "yesterday" is not a prepositional phrase. It is an adverb that refers to the day before today. Prepositional phrases consist of a preposition and a noun or pronoun that functions as its object.
A compound noun is a noun made up of two or more words combined to form a noun with a meaning of its own.There are three types of compound nouns:open spaced: tennis shoe, ice cream, paint brushhyphenated: mother-in-law, fifty-five, six-packclosed: bathtub, baseball, houseboat
Consist is a verb.