No. It is not an adjective. An adjective describes something.
Yes, it is an adjective.
No it's not a adjective, an adjective is a describing word.
Yes, it is an adjective. it is the comparative form of the adjective 'scary.'
The adjective is cloudless. It describes the sky.
'Priority' is a noun, and adverbs are made from adjectives. However, 'prior' is an adjective that does not have a corresponding adverb.
The word prior is an adjective. It means in advance or previous.
The word 'priority' is a noun, a word for a concern, interest or desire that comes before all others; the person or thing that is regarded as more important than another; the precedence given to some before others; a word for a thing.Note: Only one of seven dictionaries (+Google) consulted listed 'priority' as an adjective. That dictionary did not cite any basis for that listing. When the noun 'priority' is used as an adjective, it can be considered an attributive noun (noun adjunct); for example, a priority situation.
There is no grammatical issue here, simply an adjective and a noun. Be careful with the word priority. It means "precedence, especially regarding relative importance." The sentence "Such-and-such is the top priority" is not good. Careful speakers say "Such-and-such has top priority."
First in priority is correct. Priority is a much-misused word. It is something to have, or to be in, not something to be. Better speakers never say something is a priority, but rather that it has priority.
priority debts must be pais IN FULL, non-priority does not.
there is no abbreviation for priority.
'I worked always priority' is a clumsy phrase that will not make a suitable sentence. Try: My work has always been my priority. The work is always my priority. That I worked was always my priority. My priority is always that I work.
a soft priority is one that will not act if it is countermanded by another priority, a hard priority. example: a policemans soft priority is to maintain the appearance of peace. his hard priority is to keep the people under control of the elected dictator.
No, "at" is not typically used before the word "priority." It is more common to say "top priority" or "highest priority" without "at."
The plural of the noun priority is priorities.
priority inheritance: when a job blocks one or more high priority jobs, it ignores its original priority assignment and executes its critical section at the highest priority level of all the jobs it blocks.priority ceiling: gives each shared resource a predefined priority ceiling. When a task acquires a shared resource, the task is hoisted (has its priority temporarily raised) to the priority ceiling of that resource. It will not see whether the job has been blocked or not, simply it raises to the priority of the shared resource.