No, the word 'liable' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun.
Example: A good lawyer can help us track down the liable party.
The adjective 'liable' describes the noun 'party'.
A noun is a word for a person, a place, a thing.
The noun related to the adjective 'liable' is liability, a word for a thing.
calendar = noun and verb heavens = noun, plural archaeologist = noun Winnebago = noun, proper written mathematics = adjective + noun the hickory fort = article + noun + noun (the noun 'hickory' used to describe the noun 'fort' is functioning as a noun adjunct)
The word terror is a noun. It is mostly an uncountable noun.
The most liable place for an earthquake is on a major fault line. Japan suffers strong earthquakes yearly. They suffer about 1500 a year.
The term 'Saturday afternoon' is a noun phrase, the noun 'afternoon' described by the noun 'Saturday'.A noun functioning as an adjective to describe another noun is called an attributive noun or a noun adjunct.The noun 'Saturday' is a proper noun, the name of a specific day of the week. A proper noun is always capitalized.The noun 'afternoon' is a common noun, a general word for a period of any day.A noun phrase is a group of words based on a noun that functions as a unit in a sentence in any position that can be filled by a noun. Examples:Saturday afternoon is the class picnic. (subject of the sentence)We're going to the picnic on Saturday afternoon. (object of the preposition 'on')
The term 'wall designs' functions as a compound noun but is not a true compound noun, a noun made up of two or more words to form a word with a meaning of its own. The term is made up of the noun 'wall', an attributive noun (a noun that describes another noun) and the plural noun 'designs'.
Liable and flyable. I'm not liable if it's not flyable or not reliable!Plyable, Liable,
No, a co signor would not be liable. A co-buyer would be liable.
the driver and the owner is liable for anything
I'm not very liable to answer this quickly.
The driver and the owner is liable.
Yes, you are liable for your husbands credit card.
Yes the person crashed the car is directly liable, but if you gave him the car and he was drunk or etc. you are also liable
Guilty and Liable both mean that you are responsible by law. However, you are "liable" in civil cases and determined "guilty" in criminal cases. There is also a difference between state (liable) and federal (guilty).
Not really.The road may be prone to flooding, or subject to flooding.Although you may say "this road is liable to flood" colloquially.In using "liable to _____" one would use the verb infinitive. As you could say "it is liable to rain" (not raining) or "the dog is liable to bark" (not barking), so you could correctly say "That area is liable to flood in the next big storm." but not "liable to flooding." This construction might still be seen used, although it is ungrammatical.
Title holder is always liable.
No, You are not liable.
Liable for what? A parking ticket? Not if it isn't your car.