No. It is a noun. One related adjective is managerial.
No. Equipment is a noun. It can be used as an adjunct with another noun (e.g. equipment manager).
"Wohnhaft" (VONE-hoft) is an adjective meaning "Residing" or "Resident". Since it is an adjective, it would be used like, "Resident Manager, the person residing in apartment B, and so on."
No, the word 'over' is a preposition, an adverb, and an adjective, not a noun.Examples:We drove over the bridge. (preposition)The soup boiled over. (adverb)I spoke to the manager about the over billing. (adjective)
The adjectives for the verb to manage are managing and managed.The adjective related to the person noun manager is managerial.
The word stifling is a present participle verb, an adjective, and a verbal noun (gerund). Examples: Verb: My manager is stifling my career as a musician. Adjective: It is stifling hot today. Noun: Stifling will not be tolerated, each student must be allowed to speak freely.
The spelling "intendant" is a legal term (a manager or director) and may not be the word sought.A similar word is attendant -(noun) someone who assists(adjective) present, or resulting
In English, the order of the words sometimes alters their meaning; often when two nouns are placed together, the first one becomes an adjective describing or clarifying the second one. This is the case here.A purchase manager is a manager in charge of making purchases (of supplies or raw materials) for a company or division. They may sometimes make the purchases themselves, but often all they do is authorize a shopping list and budget for the actual buyers to use.A manager purchase is a purchase which has been made or authorized by a manager. If the company requires a manager's approval before making certain purchases (such as land, or an expensive piece of equipment) this indicates that the permission was given, or that the manager went out and bought the item on their own initiative.
Bob
No, it is a verb or a noun (to go around, to surround; a round shape). The adjective form is circular.
It is an adjective.It is a an adjective.
An adjective
it is an adjective!