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  1. Feb 1, 2017 · In the first place the question was a word for "not seeing." You could say that he is "not seeing," he is "oblivious," he is "dense," or he is "clueless." Adjectives seem a better fit than nouns like "obliviousness."

  2. Mar 6, 2018 · Generally, simple adjectives require “not” rather than “no.” For example we may say “I am not tall,” but not “I am no tall.” Truly comparative adjectival forms always permit either ‘no’ or ‘not’ in a certain construction, regardless of the concept of “negative polarity items.”

  3. Jun 13, 2015 · To answer your original question, "increase" is being used as a verb. If it was an adjective, the phrase would read "see increased enrollments". One could also add "that" in between the verb and noun, yes. It generally isn't used, at least not in present tense (like this). Off the top of my head it could be used with the phrase "see to it that..."

  4. 1 Subject. To see is a human ability. "*To see*" serves as the subject of the sentence. Infinitive phrase (subject) + verb (is) + noun phrase (a human ability). 2 Object. She wants me to see the beautiful sunset. "Me *to see* the beautiful sunset" is the object of the verb "wants."

  5. Not: Im seeing. We can use you see when we are explaining something. They had no children. They married late, you see. We also use see to mean ‘meet or come into contact with someone’, or ‘visit a place’: We went to see my mother at the weekend. Have you seen Jerry lately?

  6. Dec 16, 2018 · I have two questions concerning 1. "seeing" and 2. "having." 1. Can "seeing" be used as a noun which might be modified by an adjective? Here's the example I am referring to: " Star Trek Into Darkness is well ______ seeing.

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  8. Sep 25, 2024 · 1. Identify naming words as nouns. A noun is any word that names a person, place, thing, or idea. Nouns can be concrete (Alice, dog, table, etc.) or abstract (beauty, independence, cycle, etc.). [1]

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