No, it is a noun or a verb. The verb's past participle, flowered, can be used as an adjective.
No it is not
Yes, blooming can be used as an adjective. The blooming flowers look beautiful.
floral or flowery
Referring to flowers in general, it is "floral." The word flowering (present participle of to flower) is also an adjective for a plant that bears flowers.
The adjective is fragile. Fragile is the Predicate Adjective. Predicate Adjectives are sometimes very tricky to find.
No. Flower can be a verb or a noun. It can be used as a noun adjunct (like an adjective) in terms such as flower garden and flower petals.
yes it is. like this is an attractive flower.
No, the word 'pretty' is an adjective, a word that describes a noun; for example, a pretty flower, a pretty dress.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence; for example:That's a pretty flower. Where did you get it? (The adjective 'pretty' describes the noun 'flower'; the pronoun 'it' takes the place of the noun 'flower' in the second sentence.)
sober
Flowers have a good fragrance.He had a red flower in his lapel.The room was filled with beautiful flowers.A small flower was set at each place.She was an adorable little flower girl.
An adjective modifies or further describes a noun or pronoun. For example, in the sentence "The red flower was pretty," red and pretty are adjectives because they further describe the flower. Adjectives are often confused with adverbs, which modify adjectives, verbs, or other adverbs.
"Jolie fleur" is a French equivalent of "lovely flower."Specifically, the feminine adjective "jolie" means "pretty, lovely." The feminine noun "fleur" means "flower." The pronunciation is "zhoh-lee fluhr."
The nouns in the sentence are flower and fragrance, words for things.The noun 'flower' is the subject of the sentence.The noun 'fragrance' is the direct object of the verb 'has lost'.Note: The possessive adjective its does not have an apostrophe. The sentence should read, "The flower has lost itsfragrance."