No, painful an adjective, a word that describes a noun (a painful injury, a painful situation).
The noun form of the adjective 'painful' is painfulness.The word 'painful' is the adjective form of the noun pain.
yes painful is an adjective. for example, It was a painful experience Painful here is used to describe the kind of experience it was. to identify an adjective note that it describes a noun and occurs between a determiner and a noun.
The prefix that means painful or difficult is"dys"
The noun 'pain' is an abstractnoun as a word for mental or emotional distress, grief.The noun 'pain' is a concretenoun as a word for a basic bodily sensation that is caused by something harmful, a physical signal that something is wrong.
The plural form for the noun pain is pains.
Yes, it is. The noun is pain, and the adjective form is painful.
The word 'boil' is both a noun (boil, boils) and a verb (boil, boils, boiling, boiled).Examples:He brought a kettle of water to the boil. (noun)She developed a painful boil on her leg. (noun)I can boil your eggs or fry them. (verb)
The noun or verb pain forms adjectives from the present and past participle: paining and pained (e.g. a pained expression). The derivative adjectives from pain include painful and the antonym, painless.
I think you're asking for a sentence using the noun, hairclips. Here's one: The painful hairclips hurt my head.
Periodic is the adjective related to the noun period. Adjectives used to describe the word period include painful, prolonged, and heavy.
Shame can be both a noun and a verb. As a noun, it refers to a painful feeling of humiliation or distress caused by the consciousness of wrong or foolish behavior. As a verb, it means to cause someone to feel ashamed or embarrassed.
An adjective is a word that describes a noun. A "bad" adjective gives a negative indication. Painful, pompous, possessive, prudish, presumptuous, prejudicial.