The adjective form for the verb to force is the past participle, forced.
The adjective forms for the noun force are forcible, forceful, and forceless.
Einstein said that the most powerful force is the Strong Nuclear Force, thus the adjective 'strong'.
No, it is not. It is the past tense and past participle of the verb to force. (compel, impose). It can be a verb form, a participial, or an adjective (e.g. forced lock, forced confession).
Yes, it is an adjective. It is the comparative form of the adjective dark.
The word 'centrifugal' is an adjective used to describe a noun as moving or directed outward from the center.Example sentence:You are held in your seat on a loop roller coast by centrifugal force.
The adjective is lightened
Rather is an adverb, and dull is an adjective.
It can be (an enforced absence). It is a form of the verb "enforce."
Yes it is. It means having motion or force.
Regulates the force of the adjective or adverb it modifies
No, brunt is a noun. It means the majority of the force or impact.
Einstein said that the most powerful force is the Strong Nuclear Force, thus the adjective 'strong'.
No, it is not. Shear can be a verb (to cut, remove wool, or to apply force at an angle) or a noun (cutting tool, shearing force). It can, however, be a noun adjunct in terms such as shear strain. *Not to be confused with the homophone "sheer" - adjective meaning transparent.
Force can be used as a noun or a verb, but it is not an adjective. It can, however, be used as a noun adjunct (force multiplier, force equation, force field). Adjectives could including forcing, forced, or forceful.
it depends on the context, but if it's "i pulled a tooth" then no.
The word strong is an adjective. It means being able to produce a great force.
Coerse means force someone to do something. Coersive is the adjective form of the word coerse.
No, bulling is not an adjective in the English language. It is the progressive form of the verb, bull, which means to shove or force ones way. example: The man was bulling his way through the crowd.