| 1. | Usually this is used as an agent noun ( e . g.
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| 2. | :You might like to read about agent nouns and nominalization.
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| 3. | These-ee words are passive, the reverse of agent nouns.
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| 4. | :: : Hallucinator could be the agent noun ( nominative singular ) derived from the verb.
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| 5. | Every verb has a corresponding agent noun.
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| 6. | These words are primarily Latin agent nouns ending in "-or " and names of particles ending in "-on ".
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| 7. | Radke and Ancellotti e Cerri interpret the-t-form as a kind of active participle or agent noun and this would be the only possibility.
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| 8. | The "-er " words in the last passage are infinitives, not agent nouns, so it's the privilege " to " engrave, manufacture, and mint.
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| 9. | In this case, it is used as a native suffix for agent nouns . Gareth Hughes 15 : 42, 10 March 2007 ( UTC)
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| 10. | An agent noun, which performs the action of the verb in its root, usually ends with-or ( an " actor " acts ) or-er ( a " writer " writes ).
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