No, the word 'magician' is a noun, a word for a person.A noun is a word for a person, a place, or a thing.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.Example:The magician disappeared in a puff of smoke. Hedid not appear again. (the pronoun 'he' takes the place of the noun 'magician' in the second sentence)
It is a noun.
No, it is a common noun.
The collective noun is an illusion of magicians.
No, if it refers to general or common name. For example, The magician was very good. However, if part of a proper noun, such as a stage name, then yes. For example, Marcus The Great Magician performed tonight.
The common nouns in the sentence are: magician, announcement, and news.
No. Magician, like the word artisan, is a noun. A magician is a person with magic powers, or who performs magic tricks or illusions. It is sometimes metaphorically applied to a person with exceptional skill in a particular area: he was a magician with sound systems.
The noun that is replaced by a pronoun is called the noun antecedent. Example:Word-o is a magician, he changes nouns into pronouns.
That is the proper spelling (uncapitalized) of the word magician.
· macaroni · macaw · mace · machete · machine · mackerel · magazine · magician · magnet · mailbox
Yes., it can be. Example: The fair was amazing. (you are describing something) It can also be a verb form (The magician was amazing the crowds) or a noun, a gerund (Amazing the simple natives was not difficult).
Amazing is a verb form and an adjective, for which the abstract noun is amazement.Amazing as a gerund (to amaze) is an activity that results in a subjective condition of the viewers (e.g. The magician excelled at amazing the crowds).