I want chicken for dinner tonight.
My chicken was not hard to raise.
My chicken bit me on my finger.
You're such a chicken!
(meaning: You're such a coward!)
No, it is a noun. A rooster is a male chicken.
Example: The chicken is sometimes hot.
scribblenautical: it puts a chicken wobbly thing on it
Not except in the slang usage, to mean easily scared or cowardly (you're just chicken), where it can also be a noun. The compound adjective chicken-hearted extends the metaphor.The word chicken is normally a noun, for the domestic fowl and foodstuffs made from it.
Sure is an adjective. :)
You can use canned chicken broth, canned chicken and canned vegetables.
The adjective form for the verb to use is the past participle, used (a used car).The adjective form for the noun use is useful(useful information).
Happy is already an adjective.
Yes, you can use the adjective dramatic.
Yes, but then it's called chicken fried chicken.
"Yellow-bellied" is a compound adjective used to describe a cowardly person. Others are "lily-livered" and "chicken-hearted."
Yes, It Almost Has The Meaning As The Adjective.