No. Ship is a noun or verb. The noun can be used as a noun adjunct (e.g. ship supplies) or a possessive (ship's). Adjective forms include shipped and shippable.
Chat with our AI personalities
Not usually. It is usually a preposition or conjunction. It does have archaic or maritime use as an adjective: - Later years may be described as "after years" - The rear (aft) of a ship is the "after end" of the ship
The adjective sturdy modifies ship. The phrase wine-dark as an adjective modifies sea. Bravely is the adverb, modifying sailed.
The adjective is big, describing the noun eyes.
The suffix -ship forms the noun 'friendship'.The suffix -ly forms the adjective 'friendly'.The suffix -less forms the adjective 'friendless'.
No. Titanic is a proper noun, the name of a specific ship. Outside of the ship, the word "titanic" is an adjective, not a noun. If you're using it as a noun then you're talking about the ship (or the movie named after the ship, but that's still a proper noun).