The adjective forms for the verb to admire are the present participle, admiring (admiring glances, admiring fans) and the past participle, admired (an admired leader, an admired work of art).
A related adjective is admirable.
Admirable
Here are a some examples of adjective forms of the word admire: admirable admiring
Saying you strongly admire.Saying you greatly admire.
The verb for admiration is admire. As in the action "to admire something or someone".
Dw i'n edmygu (I admire) Dych chi'n edmygu (you admire)
Not all verbs are used as phrasal verbs. I think admire is one of them.
No, admirer is a noun. For the verb to admire, the adjectives include admired and admirable.
Here are a some examples of adjective forms of the word admire: admirable admiring
Here are a some examples of adjective forms of the word admire: admirable admiring
The participles for the verb admire can be used as adjectives (admiring, admired). The choice depends on whether the admiration is done or received. There is also a derivative adjective, admirable.
An adjective is a word that describes someone or something.The adjective forms of the verb to admire are:an admirable actadmiring fansan admired leaderThe adjective forms of the verb to honor are: an honorable manthe honoring committeean honored hero
Saying you strongly admire.Saying you greatly admire.
jealous would work I believe. its kind of an odd analogy just because the first two are verbs and envious is an adjective
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The verb for admiration is admire. As in the action "to admire something or someone".
It is not a sin to admire a priest as long as you admire him for the right reasons.
Dw i'n edmygu (I admire) Dych chi'n edmygu (you admire)
i admire you personality