Yes, the word 'baby' is a noun, a word for a very young human or animal; a word for a person or a thing.
To say "Your baby is sweet.", then it is a noun.
The word 'baby' is also a verb; for example: "I will not baby you any more now that you are going to high school." or "Don't baby your child."
The word 'baby' is also an adjective; for example, "She has baby skin".
No, the noun 'baby' is a count noun; one baby, two babies, three babies, etc.
The possessive form of the noun baby is baby's.Example: What is the baby's name?
The abstract noun form for the concrete noun 'baby' is babyhood.
The noun baby is the singularform.The plural form is babies.
The possessive form of the proper noun is Arturo's.The possessive noun phrase is: Arturo's baby sister.
The plural for for the noun baby is babies.
The abstract noun form of the concrete noun 'baby' is babyhood, a word for a period in a person's life.
baby - baby's
baby-sit
No. It is a noun. It can be used as an adjunct (baby shower, baby seal) but is not actually an adjective. There is also a verb "to baby." My aunt just had a new baby. (noun) Some people baby their grown children. (verb) The baby bird learned to fly. (noun adjunct)
No. It is a noun. It can be used as an adjunct (baby shower, baby seal) but is not actually an adjective. There is also a verb "to baby." My aunt just had a new baby. (noun) Some people baby their grown children. (verb) The baby bird learned to fly. (noun adjunct)
The word baby's is the singular possessive form for the noun baby: That is the baby's rattle The form babies is plural: There are three babies in that room.