"Beautifulness" is a recognized word, but I personally like "beauty" better.
No. Took is the past tense of the verb to take. An adjective describes a noun. You cannot say the took house. Took doesn't describe.
No. You can say... a)He is stupid. b)He is smart. But you cannot say... a)He is king. b)It is king. Therefore, king is a noun. Positiveness of Answer: 90% Jokypants1
An adjective cannot be the direct object of a noun or pronoun.
It cannot be a coordinate (paired) adjective because it is not an adjective -- the word never is an adverb. The adjective form (no) might be used as a coordinate adjective, as in little or no time.
"Beautifuler" isn't a word. The term is "more beautiful." Some words can be made into superlatives by adding "-er" to the end, but not all of them can.
Jealousy of other women being beautifuler than her.
No. Took is the past tense of the verb to take. An adjective describes a noun. You cannot say the took house. Took doesn't describe.
"Beautifulness" is a recognized word, but I personally like "beauty" better.
no because you cannot say that you are disguise you can only say that you for example disguise yourself so that nobody knows who you are.no...it is a verb
Grotesque is an adjective to mean bizarre,ugly,deformed,ludicrous.It cannot be used as noun.
An absolute is an adjective that cannot have any kind of degree of comparison. For instance, you cannot say something is "more perfect" than another thing.
No. You can say... a)He is stupid. b)He is smart. But you cannot say... a)He is king. b)It is king. Therefore, king is a noun. Positiveness of Answer: 90% Jokypants1
No it is a noun. An adjective is a descriptive word. If you were to say 'merciless dictator' merciless would be the adjective. or If you were to say he is dictatorial, 'dictatorial' is an adjective.
Ah, what a happy little question! "Invisible" is actually an adjective, not a noun. It describes something that cannot be seen. Just like how a fluffy cloud floats in the sky, "invisible" adds a touch of mystery to our language palette.
An adjective cannot be the direct object of a noun or pronoun.
Beautiful cannot be said as a verb, because it is an adjective, or describing word. You can make beautiful, but you cannot beautiful someone or something.