Yes, it is an adjective. It is the -able/-ible adjective form of the verb "access."
The adjective related to the noun accessibility is accessible. It is an -able/ible form derived from the verb to access.
The verb accede has participle adjectives acceded(agreed) and acceding (agreeing, accepting). There is no derivative adjective of the noun form accedence.
Follow link in the related links section below access the Online Etymology Dictionary: The origin is Scots from the verb "ramp", to rear up on the hind legs in fury like a horse, and "age" which is a Latin suffix following a verb to create a noun.
The noun 'is' is a verb, a form of the verb 'to be'. The verb 'is' functions as an auxiliary verb and a linking verb.
The verb forms are access, accesses, accessing, accessed. The verb access is an action verb (a verb for an act).
Access is a noun but can also be used as a verb.
No, it is an adjective. It is related to the noun access and the verb "to access."
Yes, it is an adjective. It is the -able/-ible adjective form of the verb "access."
It is usually the direct object of a verb so I say it's a noun. i have access. i can access. you can't say i access and use it correctly.
The homophone is the same word access. Access has several meaning for example: access = permission to approach, enter, speak with, or use access = a way or means of getting to something access = being to get to something
Accessible is an adjective.
Example sentence for the word 'access' as a noun:Our hotel room has access to the internet.The word 'access' is also a verb: access, accesses, accessing, accessed.
The adjective form is "accessible." The actual root word is the verb or noun access.
Spoke can be a verb (past tense of speak) or a noun: I spoke to the security officer about getting a temporary access card. My bicycle wheel has a bent spoke.
The adjective related to the noun accessibility is accessible. It is an -able/ible form derived from the verb to access.
The verb accede has participle adjectives acceded(agreed) and acceding (agreeing, accepting). There is no derivative adjective of the noun form accedence.