Yes. It is the adjective form of the noun education.
The adjective form is educated. Example sentence: An educated person can get a better job than an uneducated person.
As an adjective: educated As a verb: memorized
Wise, Educated.
The word education is a noun. It is usually an uncountable noun.
it is neither. Education is a noun. To educate is a verb. Adjective forms are educational and educated.
smart
No. "Educated" is either an adjective meaning "having attained a level of higher education" or a verbmeaning the "past tense of educate".
The correct form is "well-educated," with a hyphen. This is because it is a compound adjective describing someone who has received a good education. The hyphen helps clarify that "well" modifies "educated" together as a single idea.
educated,clever,insolent,intelligent, genius,brilliant,clever,keen
No, house is a thing so it is a noun. Can you use it in the sentence you are referring to it being used as an adjective/ That would help me provide you with a more accurate answer. I can think of no circumstance it could be used to describe an object. Since an adjective describes objects, my educated answer is no, it is never an adjective, only a noun.
Yes. If it ends in "ed" it will always be. It is a past tense verb.Not all words ending in -ed are past tense verbs.He is an educated man.In this sentence educated is an adjective but educated can also be a verb egThey educated their children at home.
education