Yes, it is an adjective. It means tending to cause confusion, or unclear.
Confusing
Nindvlown
The word "many" is an adjective. It is confusing i know.
You should restate your question, it's confusing
The opposite of the adjective confusing would be clear, straightforward, or understandable.The opposite of the act of confusing (someone) would be clarifying or enlightening.
A hyphen is used to separate a prefix from a proper noun or adjective, especially when the combination could be confusing or misleading without it.
No, it is not. It is a noun, a language term for speech that is deliberately ambiguous, confusing, or evasive. Sometimes the term is extended to euphemisms (or "spin").
No, the word complicate is a verb; to complicate is to make more difficult, confusing, or more complex. The adjective form is the past participle of the verb, complicated (a complicated situation).
'was confusing' is past continuous'is confusing' is present simple continuous'is going to be confusing' is future continuous
comparative more confusing, superlative most confusing
mass is confusing
Adverbs are descriptive, it is use to describe adjective, verbs and/or another adverb. The word talk is a verb, the adverb of talk is the way you describe it. He talks loudly. The child talks slowly.