The adjective is "glorious" (having or pertaining to glory).
The adjective of "glory" is "glorious".The adjective form of "glory" is "glorious".
Glorious is an adjective that relates to glory.
Glorious is the adjective form of glory
Yes it may be used as a verb. 'I do not merely enjoy being famous, I glory in it!' Here glory means to rejoice.
glorious
The abstract noun for the adjective glorious is gloriousness.The word glorious is the adjective form for the abstract noun glory.
No. An oxymoron is when a noun is described with a most antonymous adjective, like 'peaceful war'. For a noun that will match 'faded' for an oxymoron, 'faded illumination', 'faded lustre', 'faded shine', 'faded dazzle', 'faded light' or 'faded fluoroscence' will do. For an adjective that will match 'glory' for an oxymoron, 'horrible glory', 'hideous glory', 'terrible glory', 'ugly glory', 'distalentful glory' or 'useless glory' will do.
No. An oxymoron is when a noun is described with a most antonymous adjective, like 'peaceful war'. For a noun that will match 'faded' for an oxymoron, 'faded illumination', 'faded lustre', 'faded shine', 'faded dazzle', 'faded light' or 'faded fluoroscence' will do. For an adjective that will match 'glory' for an oxymoron, 'horrible glory', 'hideous glory', 'terrible glory', 'ugly glory', 'distalentful glory' or 'useless glory' will do.
The word 'glorious' is an adjective, a word that describes a noun. The noun forms for glorious are 'glory' or 'gloriousness'.
No, "glorious" is not a conjunction. It is an adjective used to describe something that is magnificent, impressive, or beautiful.Conjunctions are words used to connect words, phrases, clauses, or sentences.
That is the proper spelling of the plural of "glory", which is normally used as a singular noun (fame, notoriety). The adjective form is "glorious".
The pronouns in the sentence are:that (a relative pronoun), introduces the relative clause 'that describes nature in all its glory' relating to its antecedent 'poem'.all (an indefinite pronoun), object of the preposition 'in'.its (a possessive adjective), describes the noun 'glory'.