No, it is a noun or a verb, but not an adjective. It may be used as an adjunct (arm hole, arm length).
No. Injured is a past tense verb and an adjective. Verb: Sarah injured her arm. Adjective: Sarah has an injured arm.
I don't believe arm is slang, but it does have various meanings. It could be your arm on your body, like you said, and as an adjective, it means poor or lame, as in that was a lame excuse.
For example "attraktiv" which means attractive or "arm" which means poor.
The correct spelling of the adjective is humorous (funny, comical).The bone of the human upper arm is the humerus.
Noun, verb or adjective, depending on how it's used. Noun: "John scratched an itch on his arm." Verb: "I itch all over." Adjective: "John needs to buy an itch cream."
Yes, it is. (upper arm, upper shelves) Upper means the part closer to the top than to the bottom, or the higher section or area.
The word quickly is an adverb.An example sentence is: "he quickly withdrew his arm before the lion could bite it off".
well the muscle for your back arm is called your triceps if thats what your after.
female = female left armpit = left axilla left midle arm = left elbow from her body = abduction (when referring to movement at a joint) back = dorsal (adjective)
With all apologies, "crush husband" and "crush arm" have no meaning in the English language. "Crush" is a verb meaning to smash or flatten. Informally, it is a noun connoting the object of infatuation. It is not a modifying adjective that can be used with another noun such as "husband" or "arm."
arm arm arm arm
Yes, it is the primary adjective form of the noun poison, and describes a noun.Examples:The poisonous spider crawled up Mary's arm. Poisonous describes the spider.(although the proper term is venomous, poisonous is highly desciptive)The poisonous fumes from the chemical spread across the room.(here the technical term is toxic, but you get the idea)