No, it is a verb form. It can more rarely be a noun (desire for an occupation, especially in religious service).
It is the present participle of the verb "to call." Also it can be the gerund (for example "the prefering of calling to writting messages is not unusual"...)
It could be (e.g. a called strike, a called game). But as a past tense and past participle of to call, it is more commonly a verb form.
No, it is not. It is either a verb form (he calls, she calls) or a plural noun (more than one call).
My mom calls me "RAMBUNCTIOUS" because I have lots and lots of energy.
No. It is not an adjective. An adjective describes something.
No it's not a adjective, an adjective is a describing word.
Yes, it is an adjective.
Yes, it is an adjective. it is the comparative form of the adjective 'scary.'
It is the past tense (and past participle) of disregard, and could be an adjective. The word disregardful is another very rarely used adjective. "The sheriff said that the disregarded 911 calls would be re-examined."
The word significant is an adjective. The noun form is significance. Example sentences:Adjective: There was a significant increase in the number of calls after we placed our ad.Noun: The significance of his donation led to greater contributions by everyone.
No, it is not. Drop can be a noun (a small amount of liquid, or a fall) or a verb (to allow to fall).
The word 'roasted' is a verbal adjective; the past participle of the verb to roast. Example sentence:The roasted duck was delicious.Another verbal adjective is the present participle of the verb to roast, roasting. Example sentence:This recipe calls for a roasting chicken.
Yes, it can be (rerouted conduits, rerouted calls). It is from a verb form.It is the past tense and past participle of the verb to reroute (based on to route).
Grammatically speaking, yes. Though, it is a PROPER NOUN. but it can also be considered a adjective if like your drill Sargent calls you a Nancy boy
My mom calls me "RAMBUNCTIOUS" because I have lots and lots of energy.
The word 'call' is both a noun (call, calls) and a verb (call, calls, calling, called). Examples:Noun: I received a call from the dentist's office confirming your appointment.Verb: You must call your mother for permission to go with us.
Call as a verb:I will call you tomorrow and let you know what time I will be coming.He called her name, but she couldn't hear him.Call as a noun:Lack of phone service prevents me from placing a call.Telemarketing calls are really annoying.Call is not a pronoun, adjective, adverb, or preposition.
Yes, frequently is an adverb that tells how often the action of the verb occurs; the adjective form is frequent, the noun is frequency. Example sentences:Adverb: He frequently baked bread for the family.Adjective: She took frequent trips for business.Noun: The frequency of calls increases at the holidays.
PC Calls? computer calls?
Yes, the term 'not allowable' is correct in English.The word 'allowable' is an adjective, a word that describes a noun: an allowable expense, an allowable activity, etc.The word 'not' is an adverb that can be used to modify the adjective allowable, for example:The gas is an allowable expense but the sandwich is not allowable.It is not allowable to make personal calls while at the front desk.