"Courage is not the absence of fear, but rather the judgment that something else is more important then fear" -- Ambrose Redmoon.
The suffix in the word "courage" is "-age".
You must be brave to be able to confront your enemies.
The Hawaiian translation for the word “courage” is “kūpaʻa.”
Courage is the root word. This word cannot be split up into more parts and still keep any meaning. "Cou-" is not a prefix, and therefore cannot be a prefix on the word "rage". "-ous" is added to nouns (such as courage) to make them into adjectives.
The 5th word in "What is the 5th word in this sentence" is "the".
To have courage is to fear something but do it anyway.
John F. Kennedy wrote, "Profiles in Courage." I had the courage to report my classmate for cheating.
The man had so much courage, that he jumped into the burning building to save the woman.
He extolled the courage of the new king.
I could not muster up the courage to touch the snake.
"Come on, you have to have courage!" "No, Addison, it's hopeless."
"Everyone should muster the courage to speak in public."
The concrete noun in the sentence is firemen, a word for physical people.
Courage
Example sentence for the abstract noun 'courage':I do not have the courage to tell lies.
the pioneers faced the challenge of settling the frontier with unyielding courage
I mean his steadfast courage, his calm continual self-control.