Yes, it is. It means very strange, unusual, and/or scary.
No the word eerie is not a noun. It is an adjective.
Eerie is not a verb. It's an adjective.
Vapourous is the adjective related to the word vapour. Adjectives describing vapour include water, mysterious, and eerie.
It was an old house; eerie and with creaking floor boards. Some said it was haunted.
When the kids went to the haunted house, they thought it was eerie. The kids heard an eerie noise in the ancient basement and got scared!
No the word eerie is not a noun. It is an adjective.
Eerie is not a verb. It's an adjective.
The word "eerie" is an adjective. It is used to describe something strange, mysterious, or unsettling.
Frightening, spectral, eerie, translucent, ghastly, transparent, and incorporeal are real good ones.
It would mean ugly, un-normal, unnatural, weird, or eerie. The word, "grotesque" is an adjective.
Mount Eerie is nowhere...
Eerie ended in 1983.
Eerie was created in 1966.
Vapourous is the adjective related to the word vapour. Adjectives describing vapour include water, mysterious, and eerie.
The noun snake has adjective forms snakish, snake-like, and snaky. Only snakish can refer directly to snakes.
It was an old house; eerie and with creaking floor boards. Some said it was haunted.
warring, warlike, bloody, terrifying, deadly, horrifying, blood-curdling, bone-chilling, eerie, nerve-wracking, etc.