'Energy' - is it an adjective or noun?

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The discussion centers on the grammatical classification of the word "energy." It is established that "energy" is primarily a noun, while "energetic" serves as its adjective form. Participants clarify that in phrases like "the energy of a system," "energy" functions as a noun, similar to how "color" operates in "the color of a shirt." The conversation also touches on the phrase "energy crisis," where "energy" is viewed as a noun modifying the noun "crisis," thus creating a noun-adjective structure. This highlights the complexity of language usage, particularly in distinguishing between grammatical roles in different contexts. Overall, the consensus is that "energy" is a noun, despite its descriptive use in certain phrases.
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Energy is a value expressed in terms of calories, joules, BTUs so in this sense I would have thought it is an adjective describing a system's energy potential. However, confusion arises because it is also a noun as in 'The world is running out of energy'.
Is it both? or maybe it isn't an adjective but someother grammatical term.
 
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Nickelodeon said:
Energy is a value expressed in terms of calories, joules, BTUs so in this sense I would have thought it is an adjective describing a system's energy potential. However, confusion arises because it is also a noun as in 'The world is running out of energy'.
Is it both? or maybe it isn't an adjective but someother grammatical term.

This is not really physics :smile: but rather english grammar.

I'm not a native English speaker, but I'm pretty sure that the word "energy" is a noun. The adjective would be rather "energetic" and the adverb, "energetically", no ?

http://www.wordreference.com/definition/energy
http://www.wordreference.com/definition/energetic
http://www.wordreference.com/definition/energetically
 
The word "energy" is a noun. The adjective would be "energetic".
Grammatically that's all there is to it.
In physics it is a quantity that has meaning and can be measured; just like force, velocity, mass etc etc. As such it can give you important information about a system. That doesn't make it an adjective from a grammatical point of view.
We would talk about "the energy of a system", "the colour of a shirt".
Colour is a noun. If the colour of the shirt is red. Red is an adjective.
Hope this helps.
 
Stonebridge said:
The word "energy" is a noun. The adjective would be "energetic".
Grammatically that's all there is to it.
In physics it is a quantity that has meaning and can be measured; just like force, velocity, mass etc etc. As such it can give you important information about a system. That doesn't make it an adjective from a grammatical point of view.
We would talk about "the energy of a system", "the colour of a shirt".
Colour is a noun. If the colour of the shirt is red. Red is an adjective.
Hope this helps.

I think it helps but in 'we have an energy crisis' I think the noun in this case is crisis and the adjective is energy (describing what kind of crisis).
 
Nickelodeon said:
I think it helps but in 'we have an energy crisis' I think the noun in this case is crisis and the adjective is energy (describing what kind of crisis).

This usage is commonly referred to as a noun-adjective. Energy crisis can be expressed as "a crisis of energy" or "a crisis in energy", where energy, there, is a noun.
Other examples: government department, nursery school. These also involve noun-adjectives where an alternative is not really possible.
(Sorry mods: we seem to be a bit off topic!)
 
Moved this to general discussion, as this is about english grammar.
 
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