What part of speech is stomach?

Stomach can be categorized as a noun and a verb.

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Parts of speech

  • 1. stomach is a verb, present, 1st person singular of stomach (infinitive).
  • 2. stomach is a verb (infinitive).
  • 3. stomach is a noun, singular of stomachs.

Inflections

Verb

Noun

What does stomach mean?

Definitions

Verb

stomach - bear to eat; "He cannot stomach raw fish"
stomach - put up with something or somebody unpleasant; "I cannot bear his constant criticism"; "The new secretary had to endure a lot of unprofessional remarks"; "he learned to tolerate the heat"; "She stuck out two years in a miserable marriage"

Noun

stomach - an enlarged and muscular saclike organ of the alimentary canal; the principal organ of digestion
stomach - an appetite for food; "exercise gave him a good stomach for dinner"
stomach - an inclination or liking for things involving conflict or difficulty or unpleasantness; "he had no stomach for a fight"
stomach - the region of the body of a vertebrate between the thorax and the pelvis

Examples of stomach

#   Sentence  
1. noun Exercise gave him a good stomach for dinner.
2. noun He had no stomach for a fight.
3. noun However, if they have been vomiting numerous times, then the blood could be due to irritation of the stomach and intestines.
4. noun only once it looked like my male cat was biting at her neck and then her stomach and she was meowing fairly loud and hissed once then he backed off and now they are fine.
5. noun he has been "biting" at her neck and stomach previously while they play without her meowing or anything so im wondering if he went a little to far that one time.
6. noun My stomach is clenched with hunger.
7. noun Drinking on an empty stomach is bad for your health.
8. noun I have butterflies in my stomach.
9. noun The cancer has spread to her stomach.
10. noun My stomach started growling right there in the meeting. It was embarrassing.
11. noun No man can be a patriot on an empty stomach.
12. noun You should put something in your stomach before you go.
13. noun The doctor used X-rays to examine my stomach.
14. noun Could you send up some stomach medicine?
15. noun I suffer from a stomach ache.
16. verb He cannot stomach raw fish.
17. verb I cannot stomach it.
18. verb Will Greece be able to stomach the austerity?
19. verb Mary said her stomach still hurt.
20. verb She said her stomach still hurt.
21. verb Many Pan-Arabists are unable to stomach the acknowledgment of Berber as an official language in Algeria.
22. verb I can't stomach milk.
23. verb I cannot stomach what Tom said to me.
24. verb I can't stomach this.
25. verb It's the village of languid people, who face down, who stomach up: what could it be?
Sentence  
noun
Exercise gave him a good stomach for dinner.
He had no stomach for a fight.
However, if they have been vomiting numerous times, then the blood could be due to irritation of the stomach and intestines.
only once it looked like my male cat was biting at her neck and then her stomach and she was meowing fairly loud and hissed once then he backed off and now they are fine.
he has been "biting" at her neck and stomach previously while they play without her meowing or anything so im wondering if he went a little to far that one time.
My stomach is clenched with hunger.
Drinking on an empty stomach is bad for your health.
I have butterflies in my stomach.
The cancer has spread to her stomach.
My stomach started growling right there in the meeting. It was embarrassing.
No man can be a patriot on an empty stomach.
You should put something in your stomach before you go.
The doctor used X-rays to examine my stomach.
Could you send up some stomach medicine?
I suffer from a stomach ache.
verb
He cannot stomach raw fish.
I cannot stomach it.
Will Greece be able to stomach the austerity?
Mary said her stomach still hurt.
She said her stomach still hurt.
Many Pan-Arabists are unable to stomach the acknowledgment of Berber as an official language in Algeria.
I can't stomach milk.
I cannot stomach what Tom said to me.
I can't stomach this.
It's the village of languid people, who face down, who stomach up: what could it be?

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