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Anonymous
Yes, it is a noun. It means a competition or an objection. It can also be a verb, to challenge.
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No the word challenged is not a noun. It is a past tense verb.
The word challenged is not a noun. The word 'challenged' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to challenge. The past participle of the verb is also an adjective.The word challenge is the noun form.Example: Are you up to the challenge?The noun forms of the verb to challenge are challenger and the gerund, challenging.
No, "challenged" is not an abstract noun. It is a verb or an adjective. Abstract nouns refer to intangible concepts, qualities, or conditions, not specific actions or characteristics.
Yes, it can be (challenged laws, challenged beliefs). It is the past tense and past participle of the verb to challenge, and so is usually a verb form.
Synonyms for short: brief, low, little, small, curt, abrupt.
The Socs challenged the Greasers The Socs challenged the Greasers
A Thinker that is Challenged
I was challenged to a chess tournament.He felt challenged by her words.Bart was challenged to stay in the haunted house for thirty minutes. That was two weeks ago.
The suffix of "challenged" is -ed.
no t can not be challenged.
Yes, a person who is not mentally challenged can divorce a person who is mentally challenged would have to be proven they are mentally challenged), but they would have to let the courts decide in the provisions of the divorce what you would pay to help sustain the lifestyle of the mentally challenged person.
Divergent has been challenged.
No, "challenged" is not a verb. It is an adjective used to describe someone who has a physical or mental disability.