Yeah, I don't know. :/
It is a describing adjective.
Noun: Our company will have a booth at the job fair. Verb: We'll have to fair a that piece of fuselage to make the plane flightworthy. Adjective: We had to walk a fair distance to the service station. Relative pronoun: We did what we considered fair.
by adjective in the sentence
In a sentence.
NO but in the sentence "Use of the word "in" as an adjective is IN these days" the IN is an adjective
An adjective describes a noun.
In the sentence, "New England" acts as a proper adjective describing "countryside." The noun "state" also functions as an adjective in "state fair," specifying the type of fair being referenced.
'He was a worried boy.' In this sentence worried is describing the boy, therefore worried is an adjective.
(Fair and fare are homophones, sound-alike words, which can contributes to misspelling.)(adjective-noun)"He did not think it was fair that he pay a bus fare for his dog."(noun-noun)"The railroad offered a reduced fare for travel to the county fair."
I will fair off if i stick to my dreams
no
apathetic is the adjective. His apathetic attitude annoys me!