Strategy is a noun. Strategic is an an adjective. Strategically is an adverb.
The adjective form is strategic.
Yes, the noun strategy has the adjective form strategic. The adverb form is strategically.
Cautious IS an adjective. An adjective is an action!
The word "it" is not an adjective (it is a pronoun). A word is an adjective if it modifies (defines, characterizes) a noun or pronoun. The big tent - big is an adjective He is tall - tall is an adjective This key - this (while arguably called a determiner) is a demonstrative adjective
Strategy is a noun. Strategic is an an adjective. Strategically is an adverb.
The adjective form is strategic.
Strategic
strategic
The adjective form of the noun strategy is strategic. The adverb form is strategically.
Good strategy, bad strategy, well-defined strategy, outdated strategy, coherent strategy, sophisticated strategy, aggressive strategy...
Yes, the noun strategy has the adjective form strategic. The adverb form is strategically.
The noun is strategy, the adjective is strategic, and the adverb is strategically.
The verb strategize has adjective participle forms strategizing and strategized, but neither forms an adverb. The related noun strategy has an adjective form strategic and an adverb form strategically.
It is a noun. The adjective form is Strategic. The verb form is to Strategise, which is a modern verb and began heavy use in the latter half of the last century. It can never be a preposition, unless you're very imaginative and even then it would just be considered poor English. I was shot by the commander, so I violently ran strategy him. That's my feeble attempt, and as you can see it could never really work.
if your strategy is affecting strategy itself then the strategy is not worth implementing
it is obvious that strategy makers implements the strategy they made, strategy makers can lead the strategy to a level of succession.