Entertainment / Literature / Verbal Noun: A noun that comes from a verb. For instance, peregrination comes from the verb peregrinate, and the gerund running comes from the present participle of the verb run. Contrast this with the noun timber, which does not come from a verb.
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Verbal Verb Synonyms: word-for-word, verbatim, literal
Verbal Noun Synonyms: spoken, oral, vocal, said, uttered, expressed, enunciated, articulated, colloquial, conversational, viva voce, word-of-mouth, unwritten
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Entertainment / Literature / Verbal Ejaculation: A sudden verbal outburst or interjection expressing a strong emotion, surprise, dismay, disbelief, or pain--such as teehee, ha-ha, tush, faugh, yuck, ho-ho, and ouch. MORE
Entertainment / Literature / Verbal Noun: A noun that comes from a verb. For instance, peregrination comes from the verb peregrinate, and the gerund running comes from the present participle of the verb run. Contrast this with the noun timber MORE
Technology / Television (TV) / Play-By-Play Announcer: A type of television sports announcer, usually a professional broadcaster, who functions as narrator of the game's events, keeps track of game time, prompts the comments of the color announcers, reite MORE
Entertainment / Literature / Epicene Pronoun: A gender-neutral pronoun for human beings. English does have gender-neutral pronouns for objects (it, its), but it does not have epicene pronouns for people--only masculine and feminine ones (he, him, MORE
Entertainment / Literature / Collective Pronoun Collective Noun: A noun such as team or pair that technically refers to a collective group of individuals or individual items. What makes them tricky in grammar? They can be singular or plural (e.g., one team, two tea MORE
Technology / Television (TV) / Color Announcer: A type of television sports announcer: often he or she is a former athlete and/or coach, with first-hand expertise. MORE