The word 'more' is an indefinite pronoun, an adjective, and an adverb.
The indefinite pronoun 'more' takes the place of a noun for an unknown or unnamed number or amount.
Example: You may have more.
The adjective 'more' is placed before a noun to describe that noun.
The adjective 'more' is the comparative form (many, more, most).
Example: You may have more juice.
The adverb 'more' is used to modify a verb, an adjective, or another adverb.
Example: He's more thirsty than the others.
The word "more" (a larger amount or degree) can be a noun, adjective, or adverb.
(noun) "He wanted more and he was going to get it." "Less can be more."
(adjective) "I ate more oatmeal today than yesterday."
(adverb) "You have to turn more on mountain roads." "He was more careful than others."
The word 'most' is a noun, an adjective and an adverb. Examples:
Noun: The most that was in my pocket was a five dollar bill.
Adjective: Bob has the most sponsors for the charity walk.
Adverb: The mosquitoes are most annoying at dusk.
No, the word 'longer' is the comparative form for the adjective long:
The word 'long' is also a noun; a word for a size clothing for tall people; a word for the greatest extent (the long and the short of it).
The noun form for the adjective long is longness.
Yes, it is. Check out for example this question on the related question link below.
No. More is an adjective or adverb. more problems (adj) more beatuiful (adv)
Almost any noun that is not a word for a person is a noun for a thing.Examples:tree is a more exact noun for a thing; an elm is a more exact noun for tree.food is a more exact noun for a thing; meat is a more exact noun for food; hamburger is a more exact noun for meat.bridge is a more exact noun for a thing; suspension bridge is a more exact noun for bridge; Golden Gate Bridge is a more exact noun for suspension bridge.
Knight is a noun. More fully, it is a common noun (= improper noun).
Eye can be a noun, or more rarely a verb, meaning to watch.
therei would like to know the difference between using-:a few more and less . can both of them be used with plural nouns?Here are some examples of using 'a few more' in grammar:Plural noun: He has five apples; she has a few more.Singular noun: She has one pear; he has a few more.Singular noun: A few more of us will be coming to dinner.Plural noun: A few more diners are expected tonight.Plural noun: We plan to hold a few more dinners.Singular noun: We expected only one couple, but a few more turned up.
Yes, a compound noun is a word made of two or more individual words that form a word with a meaning of its own: butter+ fly = butterfly.
Almost any noun that is not a word for a person is a noun for a thing.Examples:tree is a more exact noun for a thing; an elm is a more exact noun for tree.food is a more exact noun for a thing; meat is a more exact noun for food; hamburger is a more exact noun for meat.bridge is a more exact noun for a thing; suspension bridge is a more exact noun for bridge; Golden Gate Bridge is a more exact noun for suspension bridge.
It is true that a compound noun is made by joining two or more nouns. A compound noun can be defined as a noun that is made up of more than one noun.
Annie Oakley is a noun, but it is more specifically a proper noun.
Nicole is a noun. A proper noun to be more precise, but a noun.
More precisely, a plural noun.
Knight is a noun. More fully, it is a common noun (= improper noun).
Yes, pad is a noun. More specifically, it is a singular, common, concrete noun.
Yacht is a singular noun. You are unclear about the meaning of "what noun is it". You need to ask more clearly what you are looking for.
A noun, more particularly a proper noun.
It would more commonly be an object noun.
more out
The noun form is dangerousness. The more common noun is "danger."