No, mayor is a noun.
The antecedent for the pronoun (possessive adjective) "their" is both " mayor" and "members".
That is the correct spelling of the adjective "mayoral" (pertaining to a mayor or his duties).
The hecklers tried to get him to react, but the mayor was unflappable.
A complement is a noun, a pronoun, or an adjective (or a phrase which acts as a noun or adjective).There are two types of complements in English grammar:The subject complement, which can be a noun or an adjective, follows a linking verb and further defines the subject of the sentence.Examples:Mr. Jones is the mayor. (mayor is the subject complement, a noun)The boy became sleepy. (sleepy is the subject complement, an adjective)The object complement similarly tells something about the direct object of a non-linking verb, and follows the object.Examples:We elected Tom our chairman. (chairman refers to Tom, and is a noun)They made the school larger. (larger refers to school, and is an adjective)
Hypocritical is an adjective, because it describes a noun. The hypocritical mayor's scandalous affair was soon exposed to public criticism.
a mayor can not stay mayor forever :)
There actually is no mayor of Bellingham but there is a mayor of Boston and the mayor of Boston is the mayor of the state of Massachusetts.
There is no mayor of America there is only a mayor of the United States.
You only add 's to the word mayor if something belongs to the mayor. By adding 's to the noun mayor, it becomes a possessive noun. For example, the mayor's speech, the mayor's office, the mayor's wife, the mayor's shoes, the mayor's lunch, etc.
The possessive form of the noun mayor is mayor's.example: The mayor's appearance caused the crowd to stop and listen.
mayor Edgardo Pamintuan mayor Marino" Boking" Morales mayor Carlito Dela Cruz mayor Jerry Pelayo mayor Dennis Pineda mayor Peter Flores mayor Rommel Concepcion
Mayor ondish is the mayor of mount Arlington