Yes, the word 'up' is a common noun as a general word for a period or state of success or good fortune; a word for any up of any kind.The word 'up' is also a verb, an adverb, an adjective, and a preposition.
Based on the way that the Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary breaks up this word, "hi-er-ar-chy" has four syllables.
The noun 'up' is a singular, common, noun. The noun 'up' is a concrete noun as a word for a physical direction. The noun 'up' is an abstract noun as a word for a positive situation or period of time.
"Hi ma"
Lock -BouncingBalloons - Chestnut Server. S2
the homophone for the word hi is high like on a ferris wheel you are very high up in the airthe word high is hi like you are saying hi how are you
In hawaiian the word "hi" is "aloha". In Hawaii there is an English dialect known as "pigon." The word hi in the pigon dialect could either be "how zit?" or "wuz up?"
You bite it then you chuck it in the fridge then you say hi to it then you chop up carrots then you watch MCraftProTutorials on utube :)
yeah it is foo I personally have to sat no, but it is up to you.....
Nobody knows. But it is said that a group of people thought of shortening "Hello", and they came up with "Hi"
Yes, the word 'up' is a common noun as a general word for a period or state of success or good fortune; a word for any up of any kind.The word 'up' is also a verb, an adverb, an adjective, and a preposition.
"Hi" IS a slang term. It means "hello."Some other slang for "hello" would be: Hey, yo, what's up, or hiya.
I'm not sure if there is an official word coined for it, but if you want something "official-sounding" I suppose that you could use a type of conglomerated word which has become somewhat common lately: "cultriphile" is a mash-up of culter/cultri--the general Latin word for knife and the originally-Greek (although borrowed in Latin and French and so carried to English) suffix -phil-(e/ic/ia) which denotes a person who loves or is attracted to something, e.g. Francophile, bibliophile, audiophile.
No. Hi is a word of greeting. Slang for it is "Yo yo yo!" or "Word up, Gee!"
A cut finger is very common, either from a sharp knife during washing up at the kitchen sink, or while opening a stubborn can (tin).
It means "What's up" or "Hi there". Used as a greeting. It is also a bad word if u just say ho.Lots of ppl don't know about it
rimy shimmy my rubby rocky hi rim wats up rim