It would not be used alone as an adjective, as could the noun blanket as a slang adjunct (e.g. blanket immunity).
The past participle of the verb (to blanket, meaning to cover completely), blanketed could be used as a participial in an adjective phrase, as in "Blanketed by several feet of snow, the town was cut off from outside aid."
No, it is a verb or a noun (to go around, to surround; a round shape). The adjective form is circular.
No, it is not an adjective. Differently is an adverb.The adjective would be different.
It is an adjective.It is a an adjective.
No, it is an adverb. The adjective is clumsy.
It can be. "Ideal" is an adjective and a noun.
a broad comment.
The word blankety is not a real English word, except as part of the euphemism blankety-blank (used in place of any expletive). The verb to blanket has participle adjectives blanketing and blanketed.
Ash from Mount St. Helens eruption was detected in several states but "blanketed" would be an overstatement.
it means cloudy and smoky
Thick underbrush blanketed the entire area.
It could be a noun or a verb. My favorite blanket is blue. The snow blanketed my front yard.
Nothing happens to the horse. Who cares about covering your horse. All your doing is making your horse a woose.
YES, Christmas is celebrating throughout the world do to the christian missionaries who have blanketed the earth spreading their religion to all the reaches of the world.
From the Mekong Delta (IV Corps) to the DMZ (I Corps); from the China Sea to the borders of Laos & Cambodia. RVN was blanketed with GIs.
The sentence "The fog blanketed the lake in the early morning" means that the lake was covered by a thick layer of fog during the early hours of the morning. The use of the word "blanketed" suggests that the fog was very dense and covered the surface of the lake completely, obscuring any visibility of the water or surroundings. The phrase "in the early morning" indicates that this event occurred during the beginning hours of the day, which is a common time for fog to form due to the cooler temperatures that often occur at night. Overall, the sentence creates an image of a peaceful, quiet morning scene in which the lake is shrouded in a thick layer of fog, creating a mystical and somewhat eerie atmosphere.
No, it is a verb or a noun (to go around, to surround; a round shape). The adjective form is circular.
The Didicas volcano hasn't done much if any significant damage. It has however killed three fishermen and blanketed the nearby Islands in ash at the times it has erupted.