Yes, it can be (a neglected child, neglected duties). It is the past tense and past participle of the verb (to neglect) and can be used as an adjective meaning ignored or not properly attended to.
This would be like evading the question. A fallacy is delusion, deception, and deceit. Some other examples would be omit, evade, disregard, reject, neglect, overlook, and disdain.
How long will you neglect me? Neglect will ruin a relationship. Simple neglect killed the roses.
This would be like evading the question. A fallacy is delusion, deception, and deceit. Some other examples would be omit, evade, disregard, reject, neglect, overlook, and disdain.
Excusable Neglect (CCP473(b)): To be excusable, the neglect must have been the act or omission of a reasonably prudent person under the circumstances. Forgetting the lawsuit, being too busy to properly respond, or being unable to afford an attorney are not ground for excusable neglect. Examples of excusable neglect include: * Illnes that disables the party from responding on apearing in court * Failure to respond because you relied on your attorney to do so * Failure to appear at trial because you relied on misinformation provided by a court officer.
The word "neglect" can be a verb or a noun, depending on its usage in a sentence.
ignore, abuse, forget (it all depends on neglect a child, or neglect to do something)
It is wrong to neglect your child.
Salutary neglect
One possible answer are some parents who neglect their children.
A Night of Neglect was created on 2011-04-19.
The word neglect is a verb and it is also a noun. You determine this from context.