Yes, busy in an adjective: busy, busier, busiest.
It can be (business partners, business law).
The word business is a noun for a company or enterprise, more specifically a commercial one.
No, it is not. It is an adjective. Compound words formed with -like are practically always adjectives.
Secondary is the right adjective
business combination is not the same as businee valuation business is the acquisation of new business in to another business to be one entity
The better business bureau is a business association.
HSBC offer a variety of services to business customers. They offer Business accounts, small business loans, business credit cards, business overdrafts, business insurance and business savings.
The noun "business" is itself used as a noun adjunct/adjective in many cases (e.g. business records, business location), as is the noun "company." The noun corporation is less frequently used because it has an adjective form, which is "corporate."
Business is a noun. It names an occupation.
Busy is the adjective form. Example use:You must wait for the light to change, this is a busyintersection.
"New" is the adjective.
No, the word 'busiest' is the superlative form of the adjective busy (busier, busiest).The abstract noun form of the adjective 'busy' is business.
Both the noun form and the adjective are merchant, an alternate adjective is mercantile. Example uses:As a noun: The new merchant on the block is a used book seller.As an adjective: His new job is on a merchant ship; no tips but no angry passengers.Alternate adjective: They run a wholesale business with a mercantile shop attached.
As an adjective: Keep a record of all of your businessrelated expenses.As a noun: We have been in business here for twenty years.
incorporated -- an adjective describing a type of (business) company that carries certain legal obligations
The correct spelling is professional (a trained individual, or as an adjective, business-like or competent).
No, it is not. It is an adjective. Compound words formed with -like are practically always adjectives.
'Successfully' can be used as an adjective, like this: "I managed to get the door open successfully." 'Successful' is something that someone has done correctly or they have done it well, but it's not an adjective; "She's been so successful." Remember, an adjective is always a word to describe, which means that successfully can be an adjective, but success on its own cannot.
Overhead can be an adverb. But it can also be an adjective or noun. Planes flying "overhead" would be an adverb. Overhead wires would be an adjective. The overhead of a business would be a noun.