The adjective form for the noun Latin is Latin; Latin language, Latin music, Latin countries.
No. Latin is a noun, the name of a language. Roman is an adjective pertaining to Rome. A noun and adjective cannot be synonyms.
as an adjective (problematic) it is problematicus. As a noun it is unknown to me
The English word mercenary can be both an adjective (describing a person's character) and a noun (a type of soldier for hire). In Latin the adjective is mercenarius and the noun is miles conductus.
No, "singular" is not a noun to the word "agreement." "Singular" usually functions as an adjective to describe a noun as being one in number, while "agreement" is a noun referring to a mutual understanding or arrangement between parties.
Stupere is Latin for "to be numb". It gives us the noun and adjective "stupid".
The Latin adjective for "full" is plenus, plena, plenum,depending on the gender of the noun it modifies
"homo" - noun "humanus /-a /-um" - adjective
The word 'maternal' is the adjective form of the noun mater (the Latin noun for 'mother') which is occasionally used in English.
No, "honour" is not an adjective. It is a noun that represents a quality of honesty, fairness, or integrity.
If you're looking for an English adjective derived from Latin, it's "avian", from avis, "bird".In Latin itself, the adjective is actually aviarius(-a, -um).
The noun form of the adjective 'agreeable' is agreeableness.