Yes, both the concept and the process are nouns. it is also a verb meaning to engage in harvesting, to gather in a crop.
No. As a noun, harvest would be considered a common noun.
Harvest is a noun (a harvest) and a verb (to harvest).
Yes, the compound noun 'home plate' is a common noun, a general word for the marker for the batter's position in baseball.
Yes, the term 'home run' is a noun, a compound noun a word for a scoring hit in a baseball game; a word for a thing,
There are no compound nouns in the given sentence.A compound noun is a noun made up of two or more words that form a noun with a meaning of its own. A compound noun can be joined, separated, or hyphenated.Examples:baseball (base+ball)football (foot+ball)home plateend zonet-shirt (or tee-shirt)
Yes, the noun harvest is a common noun, a word for any harvest anywhere.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, thing, or a title; for example:Dr. Harvest Collier, Missouri University of Science and Technology, Rolla, MOHarvest, AL 35749Golden Harvest Lane, Naples, FLWild Harvest (brand) Cereal"Random Harvest", 1942 movie with Greer Garson
No, "harvest" is not a suffix. It is a noun referring to the process of gathering crops.
what is a compound noun?
Noun: "We had a good corn harvest this year."Verb: "We will harvest the corn next week."Adjective: "We will eat corn by the light of the harvest moon."
No, "online" is a closed compound word, not a compound noun.
A compound noun form of the noun 'bride' is bridegroom.
Is the word coat a compound noun?