I am not sure there is one. Tan is generally an adjective (it's a color, and it describes a noun) or it can be a verb (referring to staying out in the sun). The only time it is used as a noun, it is the shortened version of "suntan," -- but it is not an abstract noun. Here is an example of using the word as a noun: If you go to the beach to get a tan, be careful not to get sunburned.
Note that an abstract noun refers to a noun you can not experience with your five senses-- it cannot be touched, seen, heard, tasted, or smelled. Some examples of abstract nouns are justice, bravery, courage, hate, curiosity, and amazement. You can experience the results of these things, but you cannot see or hear or smell or touch or taste them. A suntan is something you can feel or see, so it can not be an abstract noun.
Yes. It involves behavior and subjective interpretation. The actions that are defined as sins may be concrete if they can be observed.
The noun trip (trips) is a singular, common noun; a word for a thing.The noun trip is an abstract noun as a word for:a journey;a mistake;a hallucination or a stimulating experience (slang);a word for a concept.The noun trip is a concrete noun as a word for:a stumble and fall;a light, nimble step;a word for a physical movement.The word 'trip' is also a verb: trip, trips, tripping, tripped.
If the angles are measured in degrees or gradians, then: tan 3 > tan 2 > tan 1 If the angles are measured in radians, then: tan 1 > tan 3 > tan 2.
Oh honey, you're throwing some trigonometry at me? Alright, buckle up. The sum of tan20tan32 plus tan32tan38 plus tan38tan20 is equal to 1. Just plug in those values and watch the magic happen. Math can be sassy too, you know.
There is not much that can be done by way of simplification. Suppose arccot(y) = tan(x) then y = cot[tan(x)] = 1/tan(tan(x)) Now cot is NOT the inverse of tan, but its reciprocal. So the expression in the first of above equation cannot be simplified further. Similarly tan[tan(x)] is NOT tan(x)*tan(x) = tan2(x)
I am not sure there is one. Tan is generally an adjective (it's a color, and it describes a noun) or it can be a verb (referring to staying out in the sun). The only time it is used as a noun, it is the shortened version of "suntan," -- but it is not an abstract noun. Here is an example of using the word as a noun: If you go to the beach to get a tan, be careful not to get sunburned.Note that an abstract noun refers to a noun you can not experience with your five senses-- it cannot be touched, seen, heard, tasted, or smelled. Some examples of abstract nouns are justice, bravery, courage, hate, curiosity, and amazement. You can experience the results of these things, but you cannot see or hear or smell or touch or taste them. A suntan is something you can feel or see, so it can not be an abstract noun.
Yes, the noun astonishment is an abstract noun, a word for an emotional reaction.
Is undergone an abstract noun
Concrete noun
The abstract noun is criticism.
The noun 'hopefulness' is an abstract noun, a word for an emotion.
Abstract noun of hopeless
The abstract noun is obligation.
Friendship has not abstract noun because It is a abstract noun
The abstract noun form is tourism.
The abstract noun for the adjective vacant is vacantness. Another abstract noun form is vacancy.
The noun childhood is a singular, common, abstract, compound noun; a word for the time of being a child.