No. Danger is a noun, and the usual adjective is dangerous. Someone in danger is endangered.
The noun can be used as an adjunct : danger signals, danger seekers, danger area.
Yes. Dangerous is the adjective form of the noun danger. The adverb form is dangerously.
Yes, it is.
Yes
No, it's an adjective. "That man is dangerous." (describes the noun, man) The adjective form is dangerously (in a dangerous manner).
Risky is an adjective. An example sentence is "He was planning a risky endeavor."
Danger is a noun. Other words that come from danger are dangerous, which is an adjective, and dangerously, which is an adverb.
danger is a noun because an adjective describes a something of someone. if it were dangerous it would be an adjective. does this sentence make sense "it looks danger," No beacause you can't describe some think with danger.
The superlative of dangerously is "most dangerously."
The word precarious is an adjective, a word that describes a noun as dangerously lacking in security or steadiness; depending on unknown conditions or chance events.The noun form for the adjective precarious is precariousness, the quality of not being safe.
Dangerously is an adverb, and modifies vebs, adjectives or other adverbs.Examples:The car swerved dangerously.The rockfall was dangerously close to the road.He liked to drive dangerously fast.
Jesse Dangerously was born in 1979.
Dangerously is two morphemes
The adverb dangerously can refer to situations involving objects or people. Objects can present danger, and the opposite of dangerously could be "innocuously" or "harmlessly." e.g. The ship was dangerously overloaded. Persons who act "dangerously" could instead act "carefully" or "cautiously." For a characteristic, an antonym could be "acceptably" or comfortably. e.g. He was dangerously close to the enemy lines.
The duration of Dangerously Excited is 1.68 hours.
Dangerously Excited was created in 2012-07.