Yes, the word 'journey' is both a noun and a verb.
Examples:
A journey of a thousand miles begins with just one step. (noun)
A man who can afford to journey far can learn many things. (verb)
The noun 'journey' is a collective noun for a JOURNEY of giraffes.
The noun 'journey' is a singular, common, abstract noun; a word for a concept; a word for a thing.The word 'journey' is also a verb: journey, journeys, journeying, journeyed.
The possessive form of the singular noun journey is journey's.Example: We were happy to be home at our journey's end.
The word journey is both a verb (journey, journeys, journeying, journeyed) and a noun (journey, journeys). Examples:Noun: The journey took us through the Swiss and Italian Alps.Verb: We plan to journey the route of Lewis and Clark.
The plural form of the noun 'journey' is journeys.Example: The journeys of the wagon trains were long and harrowing.
journeys
No, journey is a noun, a singular, common, abstract noun; a word for a thing. A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence. The pronoun to take the place of 'journey' in a sentence is 'it'; for example:Ernest Shackleton's journey to cross the Antarctic continent began on December 5, 1913; it ended when the last of his crew were rescued in August of 1916.
Examples of synonyms of the noun 'journey' are:excursionvoyagetripExamples of synonyms of the verb 'journey' are:travelmigratewander
Journey is most often a noun - travel to another place. It can be a verb, to journey is to travel It is used as an adjective as part of the noun journeyman, meaning a man who is hired by the day, or who has completed an apprenticeship, but not yet become a master of his craft. It is not used as an adjective by itself. Note. in the word journeyman it signifies daily, not travelling.
The word venture can be a noun and a verb. The noun form is a risky journey. The verb form means to to undertake a risky journey.
The word 'trod' is not a noun. The word 'trod' is the past tense of the verb to tread (treads, treading, trod, trodden).Example: We trod the slippery rocks with care to reach the dry ground.The word 'tread' is also a noun, a concrete noun, a word for the horizontal upper surface of a step in a stair; the surface of the sole of a shoe; the outer surface of a tire; the sound of a footstep.
The base word for "to go on a journey" is "journey." In this context, "journey" serves as a noun referring to a trip or voyage from one place to another. Verbs can be derived from nouns by adding suffixes or making other modifications, but in this case, "journey" remains a noun.