Yes, the word 'tourist' is a noun, a singular, common noun, a word for someone who travels for pleasure; a word for a person.
No, it is not a preposition. Tourist is a noun, possibly used as an adjunct or adjective (tourist trap, tourist information).
The abstract noun form is tourism.
The noun tourist is a common noun, a word for any tourist.A proper noun is the name of a person, place, thing, or a title; for example:Tourist Haven Motel, Saco, METourist Street, Jacksonville, FLTourist (brand) Apparel, "A breed of creative tees."'The Tourist' movie (2010) with Johnny Depp
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The Eiffel Tower is a major tourist attraction.Compound proper noun: Eiffel Towercommon noun: tourist (functioning as an attributive noun describing the noun attraction)common noun: attraction
The concrete noun 'tourists' is a form of the abstract noun tour, a word for a concept.A related abstract noun is tourism.
A proper noun is the name of a person, place, thing, or a title. A proper noun for a tourist attraction is the name of a tourist attraction:The Blue Grotto and The Isle of CapriDisneyland or Disney WorldThe Eiffel TowerThe Grand CanyonThe Great Wall of ChinaUluru and Uluru National Park
The noun 'tourist' is a singular, common gender noun, a word for a male or a female. There is no singular, common gender, possessive pronoun to take the place of 'tourist' in a sentence. The preferred choice is to use the plural, common gender, possessive pronoun theirs rather than the awkward 'his/hers'. Example:We sometimes rent our cabana to a tourist. The responsibility for housekeeping is theirs.Alternate choices are:use the possessive adjective: Housekeeping is their responsibility.use the possessive noun: Housekeeping is the tourist's responsibility.
The tourist soon realised that he was lost.To his horror, he realised that his tourist visa had expired.He came as a tourist, but fell in love with the place and decided to migrate here.
The plural of tourist is tourists.