No, it is a characteristic or defining attribute. Adjectives may have the same spelling as nouns that represent things.
No, there is no such thing as a conjunction adjective.
The adjective relating a thing or person to Togo is Togolese.
It isn't a verb. It's an adjective."A sure thing." Sure is the adjective modifying the noun thing."I'm sure you are right." Sure is the adjective modifying I.
Absolute adjective absolute meaning the one thing you are looking for.
A word is a thing. The word 'word' is a noun.
No, it is a noun (a thing).
No hare is not an adjective, it is a noun because a adjective is like run, a doing word, a noun is a thing.
The word the is an adjective because an adjective describes a person, place, or thing that is named by a noun
The word " Many" is an adjective not an adverb. An adverb describes " how, when...etc. " An adjective describes a noun " person, place or thing " did this help??
Today's conventional authorities in grammar are quite clear: there is no such thing as an adjective that modifies another adjective. While ordinary language (and informal writing) may sometimes appear to attach one adjective to another, in every case a true adjective can (and will) only ever modify a noun.
When using an adjective to describe one thing, use the positive degree. (Wikipedia)
yes. it is a thing.--Yes, rudeness is a thing, but the WORD rudeness is an adjective or adverb.