No, agree is actually a verb. However, you could make it an adjective by saying "agreeable."
The past participle can also be an adjective (the agreed boundary).
Yes, 'agreed' is an adjective.
One adverb (rarely used) is agreeingly.An adverb more frequently used is agreeably, from the related adjective agreeable.
No. Agreed, meaning to hold the same view, is an adjective.A verb would be agree. As in "to agree with".A verb is a word that describes an action (run, walk, etc), a state of being (exist, stand, etc) or occurrence (happen, become, etc).An adjective is a word that describes a noun (the car is blue / it was a cold day / etc).
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
Severe is an adjective.
There is a derivative adjective, agreeable. But the present participle, agreeing, can be used to mean "in agreement." The past participle, agreed, can be used as an adjective meaning "agreed on."
Okay, first of all it is not mensa secundae, it its mensa secunda, the adjective has to agree with the noun. Second, it was the dessert course of a meal, not a meal in itself.Okay, first of all it is not mensa secundae, it its mensa secunda, the adjective has to agree with the noun. Second, it was the dessert course of a meal, not a meal in itself.Okay, first of all it is not mensa secundae, it its mensa secunda, the adjective has to agree with the noun. Second, it was the dessert course of a meal, not a meal in itself.Okay, first of all it is not mensa secundae, it its mensa secunda, the adjective has to agree with the noun. Second, it was the dessert course of a meal, not a meal in itself.Okay, first of all it is not mensa secundae, it its mensa secunda, the adjective has to agree with the noun. Second, it was the dessert course of a meal, not a meal in itself.Okay, first of all it is not mensa secundae, it its mensa secunda, the adjective has to agree with the noun. Second, it was the dessert course of a meal, not a meal in itself.Okay, first of all it is not mensa secundae, it its mensa secunda, the adjective has to agree with the noun. Second, it was the dessert course of a meal, not a meal in itself.Okay, first of all it is not mensa secundae, it its mensa secunda, the adjective has to agree with the noun. Second, it was the dessert course of a meal, not a meal in itself.Okay, first of all it is not mensa secundae, it its mensa secunda, the adjective has to agree with the noun. Second, it was the dessert course of a meal, not a meal in itself.
The adjective and noun agreement rule in Latin requires that a noun and any adjective that modifies must agree in gender, number, and case (but not necessarily ending).
An adjective in Spanish must agree in number (singular/plural) and gender with the noun that it describes.
Since hay is describing the way velvet feels and velvet is a noun, it must be an adjective since it is describing a noun.
No, the word craziest is the superlative form for the adjective 'crazy', a word that describes a noun.positive: crazycomparative: craziersuperlative: craziestExample sentence: "She is the craziest dog ever!"
One adverb (rarely used) is agreeingly.An adverb more frequently used is agreeably, from the related adjective agreeable.
The singular demonstrative adjective, cette (paired with a feminine object or person) is the feminine form of the French equivalent of the English word, this or that. The masculine form is ce or cet.In French, the demonstrative adjective has to agree, in number and gender, with the noun that it modifies.
In French, an adjective usually comes after the noun it describes. However, there are some irregular adjectives that come before the noun. Adjectives agree in gender and number with the noun they modify.
No, the word their is an adjective, a word that describes a noun. The pronoun form is theirs, a third person pronoun. The pronoun theirs replaces the noun that belongs to them. Examples:Adjective: I went to their house for a cook out last Saturday.Pronoun: The blue house on the corner is theirs.Please note that not all dictionaries agree that the form their (his, hers, its) is an adjective, some say that it is (they are) a pronoun. My source is Merriam-Webster. If your teacher does not agree, then go with your teacher.
Bonita, or bonito. Adjective needs to agree with subject. Most common would be bonita, cause most beautiful things/people tend to be female.
It may be (assenting parties, assenting votes). The word is the present participle of the verb (to assent: to agree or allow) and may also be a verb form, participial, or noun.