The CroswodSolver.com system found 25 answers for nouns crossword clue. Our system collect crossword clues from most populer crossword, cryptic puzzle, quick/small crossword that found in Daily Mail, Daily Telegraph, Daily Express, Daily Mirror, Herald-Sun, The Courier-Mail, Dominion Post and many others popular newspaper. Enter the answer length or the answer pattern to get better results.
Rate | Answer | Clue |
DECLENSION | Inflection of nouns, adjectives, etc., according to the grammatical cases. | |
THE | A word placed before nouns to limit or individualize their meaning. | |
-ESS | A suffix used to form feminine nouns; as, actress, deaconess, songstress. | |
PARATHESIS | The placing of two or more nouns in the same case; apposition. | |
-NESS | A suffix used to form abstract nouns expressive of quality or state; as, goodness, greatness. | |
MANIFOLD | Exhibited at divers times or in various ways; -- used to qualify nouns in the singular number. | |
PATRIAL | A patrial noun. Thus Romanus, a Roman, and Troas, a woman of Troy, are patrial nouns, or patrials. | |
DUAL | Expressing, or consisting of, the number two; belonging to two; as, the dual number of nouns, etc. , in Greek. | |
GENDER | A classification of nouns, primarily according to sex; and secondarily according to some fancied or imputed quality associated with sex. | |
-ED | The termination of the past participle of regular, or weak, verbs; also, of analogous participial adjectives from nouns; as, pigmented; talented. | |
UN- | Un- is prefixed to nouns to express the absence of, or the contrary of, that which the noun signifies; as, unbelief, unfaith, unhealth, unrest, untruth, and the like. | |
GENITIVE | Of or pertaining to that case (as the second case of Latin and Greek nouns) which expresses source or possession. It corresponds to the possessive case in English. | |
ARTICLE | One of the three words, a, an, the, used before nouns to limit or define their application. A (or an) is called the indefinite article, the the definite article. | |
-ISH | A suffix used to from adjectives from nouns and from adjectives. It denotes relation, resemblance, similarity, and sometimes has a diminutive f... | |
SYLLEPSIS | The agreement of a verb or adjective with one, rather than another, of two nouns, with either of which it might agree in gender, number, etc.; as, rex et regina beati. | |
-ING | A suffix used to form nouns from verbs, and signifying the act of; the result of the act; as, riding, dying, feeling. It has also a secondary collective force; as, shipping, clothing. | |
HENDIADYS | A figure in which the idea is expressed by two nouns connected by and, instead of by a noun and limiting adjective; as, we drink from cups and gold, for golden cups. | |
APPELLATIVELY | After the manner of nouns appellative; in a manner to express whole classes or species; as, Hercules is sometimes used appellatively, that is, as a common name, to signify a strong man. | |
APPOSITION | The state of two nouns or pronouns, put in the same case, without a connecting word between them; as, I admire Cicero, the orator. Here, the second noun explains or characterizes the first. | |
-EN | A suffix from AS. -an, formerly used to form the plural of many nouns, as in ashen, eyen, oxen, all obs. except oxen. In some cases, such as ch... | |
EPICENE | Common to both sexes; -- a term applied, in grammar, to such nouns as have but one form of gender, either the masculine or feminine, to indicat... | |
ACCUSATIVE | Applied to the case (as the fourth case of Latin and Greek nouns) which expresses the immediate object on which the action or influence of a tr... | |
WORTH | ...the phrases, woe worth the day, woe worth the man, etc., in which the verb is in the imperative, and the nouns day, man, etc., are in the dative... | |
Y- | A prefix of obscure meaning, originally used with verbs, adverbs, adjectives, nouns, and pronouns. In the Middle English period, it was little ... | |
GERUND | ... name has been applied to verbal or participal nouns in -ing denoting a transitive action; e. g., by throwing a stone. ... |