a singular or plural verb, depending on the noun closest to the verb
cloudburst starburst and bankrupt
Yes, the noun 'honeycomb' is a compound word, made up of the noun 'honey' and the noun 'comb' to form a word with a meaning of its own. Note: The word 'honey' also functions as a verb but the noun 'honeycomb' is a word for a 'comb' filled with 'honey', a noun.
Noun. Adjust is a verb.
An example is: the dog has been barking all day. A compound verb is made up of an auxiliary verb and another verb. In the example, the compound has two auxiliaries, has and been, as well as the present participle verb barking.
Yes, the word 'compound' is a noun, a verb, and an adjective.Examples:He lives in the cottage at the artists' compound. (noun)You will compound the problem if you lie about it. (verb)Soap is a compound mixture of ingredients. (adjective)
Basketball Game.
The word 'upgrade' is both a compound noun and a compound verb; for example:Noun: We have ordered the upgrade for your computer.Verb: We will upgrade the rest of the department in next month's budget.
noun
No, the word 'looks' is a verb, the word 'out' is an adverb modifying the verb.
It is a compound noun.
No, "funny name" is not a compound verb. A compound verb is formed by combining multiple verbs together to create a new meaning, such as "carry out" or "break up". In "funny name", "funny" is an adjective describing the noun "name".
The term 'final game' is not a compound noun, it's an adjective noun combination, a noun phrase.A noun, a compound noun, and a noun phrase all function as a noun, as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.
No, homework is not a verb. The word homework is a noun, an uncountable, common, compound, abstract noun, a word for a thing.
The word that usually goes with the verb to 'cheep' is the noun 'cheep'; that is cheep-cheep, a compound noun for the sound made by a bird.The homophone, the adjective 'cheap', is often paired with the noun 'skate' to form the compound noun cheapskate.
The word 'laughing' is not a compound noun; it is a word+suffix. The noun 'laughing' is called a gerund (a verbal noun). A gerund is the present participle of a verb that can also perform the functions of a noun as the subject of a sentence or clause and the object of a verb or a preposition.
Yes. A jay is a bird and walk is a verb/noun.