Your question makes no sense.
no. Saints are nouns, blessed is an adjective
The first is a noun; the second is an adjective.
Relevant
It is the same thing as a "predicate adjective." It is an adjective that follows a linking verb and refers to the subject of the sentence.Examples:The boy is tall.The man seemed tired.
a negative adjective would be fat or chunky while a positive adjective meaning the same thing would be big build or heavy set.
No, there is no such thing as a conjunction adjective.
Proper adjective takes the place of a person, place, or thing's name
Lisbon is the name of a city, a proper noun which should be capitalized. There is no English adjective for a person or thing of or from Lisbon, but the proper adjective in Portuguese is Lisboeta.
Noun. It is the name of a thing. Hot is normally an adjective, in that it describes a thing. However, here it is part of the name of a particular sauce.
Yes, "different" can function as an adjective. In English grammar, an adjective is a word that describes or modifies a noun or pronoun. "Different" describes how one thing is not the same as another, making it an adjective.
The adjective meaning "same" is 'mismo' (misma for feminine terms). "The same" is 'el mismo' (la misma) or 'lo mismo' (same action). Examples: They have the same name - Tienen el mismo nombre He always does the same thing - Siempre hace lo mismo
No, it is a characteristic or defining attribute. Adjectives may have the same spelling as nouns that represent things.