No, among is not an adjective. It is a preposition. Example: "It is peaceful to sit among the trees." It is not describing anything.
The? Do you mean an adjective for dude? Or do you mean definition? An adjective could be anything from amazing to zoo-obsessed. The definition is ''a word that describes a noun."Hope I helped.
awful is a very well known adjective indeed.Awful is used to describe anything or anyoneE.g. Bailey is an awful person.
No, the word 'thorough' is an adjective, a word that describes a noun (a thorough examination, a thoroughscrubbing, etc.)The noun form of the adjective 'thorough' is thoroughness.
It is an adjective meaning that one is all-powerful, i.e. able to do anything.
Yes. Nearly anything that ends with the suffix "-ly" is an adjective.
No, among is not an adjective. It is a preposition. Example: "It is peaceful to sit among the trees." It is not describing anything.
Adjectives are modifying words. Your word doesn't modify anything.
The? Do you mean an adjective for dude? Or do you mean definition? An adjective could be anything from amazing to zoo-obsessed. The definition is ''a word that describes a noun."Hope I helped.
It can mean anything to do with a mill and it's a feminine adjective.
awful is a very well known adjective indeed.Awful is used to describe anything or anyoneE.g. Bailey is an awful person.
An adjective is a noun that better describes a noun so anything The scary fugitive The black fugitive The ugly fugitive
No, the word 'thorough' is an adjective, a word that describes a noun (a thorough examination, a thoroughscrubbing, etc.)The noun form of the adjective 'thorough' is thoroughness.
It is an adjective meaning that one is all-powerful, i.e. able to do anything.
No, the word 'absolutely' is the adverb form of the adjective 'absolute'.The word 'absolute' is both an adjective and a noun.The noun 'absolute' is a word for a value or principle that is regarded as universally valid; a word for something that exists without being dependent on anything else; a word for a thing.The noun form of the adjective 'absolute' is absoluteness.
The word victory (victories) is a noun only. The adjective form is victorious. The noun form for the adjective is victoriousness. The adverb form is victoriously.
Spanish can be both a noun and adjective. As a noun, Spanish is a language. As an adjective, it describes anything that is Spanish (like Spanish Rice).