No, nouns and adjectives are two different parts of speech.
A noun is a person, place, or a thing (e.g. Toronto, book, Michael), whereas an adjective describes a noun (e.g. Toronto is a large city, the book's spine is thick, Michael is annoying).
Nouns do not have comparative forms.
Adjectives have comparative forms, for example:
Yes, it is. They don't call it comparative for nothing!
Yes
No, hunt is not an adjective because it does not describe the noun. Hunt would be a noun, not an adjective!
noun and pronoun
Pink is an adjective and a noun. Adjective: She prefers pink lipstick. Noun: Pink looks good on her.
No. An adjective describes a noun and an adverb describes a verb.
The word 'healthy' is an adjective used to describe the noun 'lifestyle'.Examples of adjective that can describe the noun phrase 'healthy lifestyle' are:dailyeasymoreordinarypossibletruepracticalreasonable
An adjective would be used to describe a noun.
Noun. A person can have impudence. It does not describe a noun; which is what an adjective does. In THAT case, the adjective would be impudent.
No, hunt is not an adjective because it does not describe the noun. Hunt would be a noun, not an adjective!
No. It is a noun. It is never used as an adjective to describe another noun.
An adjective describes a noun.
'Friendly' is an adjective because you'd use it to describe someone. Any word that can be used to describe someone (a noun) is an adjective.
Adjective describes a noun or pronoun. It modifies the noun and pronoun.
No, a noun only needs an adjective when the speaker wishes to describe the noun.
no, beef is a noun. the function of an adjective is to describe the noun. for example: BLUE chair (blue is adjective and chair is an noun.)
The purpose of an adjective is usually to describe a noun.
No, an adverb describes a verb or an adjective. An adjective is the word that describes a noun.
No bizarre is not a noun. A noun is a person place or thing. Bizarre is an adjective. An adjective is a word used to describe a noun.