fool is a noun but foolish is a adjective
foolish
more foolish, most foolish
more foolish - most foolish
No. Modern and foolish are not antonyms. modern: recent or current foolish: silly or embarrasing
yes
The noun form of the adjective 'foolish' is foolishness.The word 'foolish' is the adjective form of the noun fool.
The word 'foolish' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun.The noun form of the adjective 'foolish' is foolishness.The word 'foolish' is the adjective form of the noun fool.
Together, they suggest the abstract noun naivety (naiveness). Separately, they could be youth (youngness) and honesty (honestness).
The abstract noun form of the concrete noun coward is cowardice.
The abstract noun form for the adjective 'foolish' is foolishness.The abstract noun form for the adjective 'cruel' is cruelty.
Foolish is an adjective. It does not have a past tense, but can be used to describe a noun as foolish in a past tense. ex. The man was foolish.
The word "foolish" is an adjective.The adverb form is "foolishly".The noun form is "foolishness".The verb form is "fool".
Tomfoolery is foolish or silly behavior. It is a noun.
fool is a noun but foolish is a adjective
Yes, the noun 'folly' is an abstract noun as a word for the quality of being foolish; a foolish action or idea; a costly, unwise investment or expense; a word for a concept.The noun 'folly' is a concrete noun as a word for a whimsical or extravagant and often useless structure or building; a word for a physical thing.
"Fool" is a verb and a noun and, as such, does not have a superlative degree. The superlative degree of the adjective foolish is most foolish.