It can be, as in burnt toast.
It is one past participle of the verb (to burn) and may be used as an adjective, as may the other past participle variant, which is burned.
It depends. It is considered a verb if you "burnt" something. However, if you say, "The rug is burnt," then it is an adjective.
Yes, burnt is the past participle of the verb to burn (burns, burning, burned or burnt), which is also an adjective form. Example sentence:She pulled a burnt photo of her family from the debris left from the fire.
The word 'burnt' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to burn (an alternate to the form 'burned'). The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.Examples:My arm was burnt by the sun on the long drive. (verb)The kids loved everything, even the burnt marshmallows. (adjective)
No, it is an adjective. The past tense of the verb "burn" is "burned" as in:The house burned to the ground.It would be incorrect to say:The house burnt to the ground.However, it is correct to use it to describe something that has been burned, such as:After the fire, the house was burnt.
Colors do not have surnames. Colors with two names are comprised of a noun and an adjective. (i.e: The color burnt [adj.] umber [n.])
It can be, at least for the yellow-brown color of caramel (burnt sugar). Other uses of caramel are a noun, or a noun adjunct (caramel apple, caramel candy).
adjective -- I like crisp lettuce verb -- First crisp the bread crumbs in the oven noun -- The toast was burnt to a crisp.
The burnt part of toast is commonly referred to as the "charred" or "burnt" portion.
Burnt burn burnt burnt
200 caloires burnt is just that....it is 200 caloires burnt. It is about 1/18 of a pound burnt.
brûlé dans l'amour ~burnt in love Burnt dans l'amour. ~Burnt in love. Je suis brûlé dans l'amour. ~I am burnt in love.
Of course! Everything can get burnt.