Yes, blooming can be used as an adjective. The blooming flowers look beautiful.
No. It can be a noun (flower) or a verb (to flower, to grow). But the adjective form would be 'blooming.'
Blooming means flowering.
Blooming is an alternative to the British word 'bloody', which is an exclamation of surprise or just as an emphasise on a sentence ('bloody hell!') For example: 'She wants me to go to the shop now? No blooming chance!'
None producing flower.
buds which are going to bloom.
The verb forms ending in -ing (called the present participle) also function as adjectives and gerunds (verbal nouns). Examples of present participles that describe a flower are:bloominggrowingbeautifyingbrighteningexpandingdancing (in the wind-good for poetry)wavingcalmingbuddingburgeoningunfoldingwilting
Yes. Example sentence: There were plentiful, blooming, bright as can be flowers spilling out of the baskets at the market.
blooming
In the blooming desert.
Blooming = pore'ach (פורח)
The address of the Blooming Grove Historical Society is: Po Box 55, Blooming Grove, TX 76626
The address of the Blooming Prairie Branch Library is: 138 Highway Ave South, Blooming Prairie, 55917 0187
tell me why my verbena plant not blooming
blooming onion - blühender Zwiebel
Blooming - album - was created on 2010-07-21.
The First Blooming was created on 2007-03-29.
Club Blooming was created on 1946-05-01.
The phone number of the Blooming Prairie Branch Library is: 507-583-7750.