No, it is a noun or a verb. Related adjectives are those for the related verb to mount, rather than the verb to amount.
No. To question is a verb, and a question is a noun. The forms questioned or questionable are adjectives.
No, it is either a verb form or a plural noun. It is the third person singular, present tense conjugation of the verb to reason. Related adjectives include reasoned and reasonable.
The word 'creepy' is an adjective (creepy, creepier, creepiest), a word that describes a noun (a creepy house, a creepy story).The verb form is to creep (creeps, creeping, crept).The adverb form is creepily.The noun form for the adjective creepy is creepiness. A related noun is a creep (creeps).
The adjectives for the noun and verb scare are scary and scared. The related adverbs are scarily (in a scary manner) and scaredly (in a scared or frightened manner).
The adjectives are enormous and majestic, describing the noun statue.
As far as I know enormous is an adjective
The word trust is both a noun and a verb. The present participle, trusting, and the past participle, trusted, of the verb are both adjectives. Other adjectives are trustability, trustworthy, and trusty.
Care is a noun and a verb. Caring and careful are adjectives. Carefully is an adverb.
Been is a verb, it is the past participle of be.
"Possibly" is an adverb, as it modifies a verb, adjective, or another adverb to indicate uncertainty or potentiality.
An adjective is to a noun as an adverb is to a verb. Adjectives describe nouns. Adverbs add information to verbs.
An adjective is to a noun as an adverb is to a verb. Adjectives describe nouns. Adverbs add information to verbs.
The derivative adjectives are introductive and introducible. The present and past participles of the verb to introduce may be used as adjectives. They are introducing and introduced.
No, it is a noun or a verb. Related adjectives are those for the related verb to mount, rather than the verb to amount.
verb is annoy adjectives are annoying/annoyed nouns are annoyance / annoyer
"Proud" isn't a noun, it's an adjective. Adjectives are words that describe nouns. Adjectives come before nouns (a proud person) or act as subject complements following a linking verb (He is proud of his daughter.)"Proud" does not have a verb form.