The word fuzzy is an adjective. The noun form is "fuzz."
No
No, it is not. It descibes a noun, so it is an adjective. It can refer to having a light coating of fur, or it can refer to an idea that is not very understandable.
No, the phrase "Fuzzy Farmers Market" does not need an apostrophe. The term "Farmers Market" is a noun used in a descriptive manner to refer to a market held by farmers. The phrase "Fuzzy" is simply an adjective describing the market, so no apostrophe is required.
because fuzzy wazzy was fuzzy
fuzzy graph is not a fuzzy set, but it is a fuzzy relation.
it depends on the wreath you are talking about. If it is the green fuzzy thing on peoples doors around Christmas time, then that is a noun.
fuzzy wuzzy had no hair... therefore he cannot be fuzzy
 Fuzzy inference is a computer paradigm based on fuzzy set theory, fuzzy if-then- rules and fuzzy reasoning  Applications: data classification, decision analysis, expert systems, times series predictions, robotics & pattern recognition  Different names; fuzzy rule-based system, fuzzy model, fuzzy associative memory, fuzzy logic controller & fuzzy system Fuzzy inference is a computer paradigm based on fuzzy set theory, fuzzy if-then- rules and fuzzy reasoning  Applications: data classification, decision analysis, expert systems, times series predictions, robotics & pattern recognition  Different names; fuzzy rule-based system, fuzzy model, fuzzy associative memory, fuzzy logic controller & fuzzy system
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Fuzzy-Wuzzy (a poem by English author and poet Rudyard in 1892) refers to the Hadenoda warriors who fought the British army in North Africa and the respect of the ordinary British soldier toward them. The name "Fuzzy-Wuzzy" could be entirely English in origin, or it could combine some sort of Arabic pun (by chance based on ghazī, "warrior"). It refers to their butter-matted hair that gave them a unique "fuzzy" look.
Fuzzy wuzzy was a bear But Fuzzy wuzzy had no hair So he wasn't fuzzy, wuzzy?