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.
A word is a thing. The word 'word' is a noun.
Absolute adjective absolute meaning the one thing you are looking for.
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.