An adjective is a word that describes the quality of a noun.
Metric is an adjective and refers to a system of measurement.
Yes, it is. It is the opposite of the adjective "definite" and means of unspecified status or duration.
Thigh: femoralLeg (anatomically defined): Tibial
The word "sinewy" is an adjective, used to describe something that is lean and muscular, with well-defined muscles.
In school grammar lessons, a single-word adjective is one that is defined by the given meaning. For example, a single-work adjective for "in a state of poverty" would be "impoverished."
An adverb is a word that describes the quality of an adjective, a verb, or another adverb.
The word parenthetical is an adjective in the English language. It is defined as related to or inserted as in parenthesis.
Yes it is. It refers to skin (Latin cutis), which is also defined separately by its layers.
No, farmer is a noun (a noun being defined as a person, place, or thing); an adjective describes or otherwise qualifies a noun
The word definitive is an adjective. It describes something which has been explicitly defined.
In school grammar lessons, a single-word adjective is one that is defined by the given meaning. For example, a single-work adjective for "in a state of poverty" would be "impoverished."
I'm not at all sure that there is such a thing. You may have read a definition, starting with "infinite: adjective", and concluded that 'infinite adjective' was the thing being defined. The word infinite is an adjective.