Yes, it is an adjective. It means overly fancy or overdone.
No. Tyrannical is an adjective. Tyranny is the system or act of overly controlling something. To be tyrannical is to be consistently attempting tyranny, or something of that nature.
No, "nosy" is an adjective used to describe someone who is overly curious or prying. It is not a verb.
No, "fussy" is not a possessive noun. "Fussy" is an adjective that describes someone who is overly picky or demanding. Possessive nouns show ownership or relationship between things.
No, the word 'fussy' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun (a fussy baby, a fussy eater).The abstract noun form of the adjective 'fussy' is fussiness,The word 'fussy' is the adjective form of the abstract noun fuss.
Answerpedantic is an adjective decribing a person or statement as heavily loaded with scholarly knowledge; usually implying that he/she/it's so precise that it's boring.AnswerAn adjective describing someone that has a narrow focus on trivial aspects. It is often used to describe someone annoyingly perfectionist. AnswerExcessively concerned with book learning and formal rules.AnswerTo be pedantic means you are overly concerned with minute details. E.G. Drill Sergeants, parents, and teachers. I probably could have left it at drill sergeantBeing overly precise about something.
The word maudlin means to be overly sentimental. Some synonyms for maudlin include sentimental, mushy, romantic, weepy, sappy, syrupy and sugarcoated.
The word "garish" functions as one part of speech, specifically an adjective. It is used to describe something that is overly bright, flashy, or showy.
overly complicated = complex
The usual antonym would be "giant" (a overly large person rather than an small one). Opposites for the adjective "midget" could be giant, oversize, or colossal.
Something that is taken to be excessive. Such as--> The shopper was overly rude to the cashier.
Well, overly means "to an excessive degree." So if you call someone overly cute, you're saying that they're taking the cuteness too far.