Yes the word deadline is a noun. It is a common noun.
No, it is a noun. Used with other nouns in terms such as deadline notice, it is a noun adjunct rather than an adjective.
Deadline is a noun. It means a specific time by which something must be finished.
No, "deadline driven" is typically not hyphenated. It is used as a compound adjective where "deadline" modifies "driven." However, if used before a noun as an adjective (e.g., "deadline-driven project"), it is often hyphenated for clarity.
A deadline can be changed, but a priority deadline cannot.
Yes, the relative pronoun 'who' is the correct pronoun that takes the place of the noun 'students' in both parts of the sentence."The students who take this deadline seriously are the students who are accepted."
The application deadline for the program with a rolling deadline is ongoing, meaning there is no specific deadline and applications are accepted throughout the year.
Deadlines is the plural of deadline
"Prior to" can be expressed in the past tense as "before" or "previously." For example, "She had completed the project prior to the deadline" can be rephrased as "She had completed the project before the deadline."
Deadlines is the plural of deadline
If the IRS receives your return or payment after the deadline date but it is postmarked on or before the deadline date, then it is considered to have been filed on time.
A fail; to meet a deadline is ridculous. If you have something to do and you have a deadline, you need to get it done
There was no fixed deadline.