No, it is a noun (a person). An adjective describes something.
It can be (performed rituals, performed operations).
It is the past tense and past participle of the verb to perform, and may be used as a verb or an adjective.
No. Perform is a verb (to act, to do a task). The present participle (performing) can be an adjective referring to a circus animal (e.g. performing bears).
No, beautiful is an adjective, a word that describes a noun; for example beautiful roses, a beautiful sunset, etc.The noun form for the adjective beautiful is beautifulness. Another noun form is beauty.
There are no adjective forms for the noun performance.The present participle, performing, and the past participle, performed, of the verb 'to perform' are also adjective forms. Example uses:The performing skaters put on an exciting show.The previously performed pieces aren't repeated at tonight's concert.
No. It is not an adjective. An adjective describes something.
Yes, it is an adjective.
No it's not a adjective, an adjective is a describing word.
The participles of the verb perform may be used as adjectives: performing or performed. There is also a rarely-used derivative adjective, performable.
I guess it's "Performed". ex: A performed song.
Glossy is not a verb, as you cannot perform a glossy. Glossy is an adjective, used to describe something
No, beautiful is an adjective, a word that describes a noun; for example beautiful roses, a beautiful sunset, etc.The noun form for the adjective beautiful is beautifulness. Another noun form is beauty.
The word "perform" can't have an adjective. Adjectives only modify nouns, and perform is a verb. And adverbs and adjectives are usually the only parts of speech that can transition. Because a verb that describes an action( run, cook, play are some examples), it suddenly describe the noun.
Yes, the pronoun 'their' is a possessive adjective, a word that describes a noun such as 'ability' as belonging to a plural or multiple antecedent noun. Example:We test our applicants on their ability to perform the job.
There are no adjective forms for the noun performance.The present participle, performing, and the past participle, performed, of the verb 'to perform' are also adjective forms. Example uses:The performing skaters put on an exciting show.The previously performed pieces aren't repeated at tonight's concert.
The noun form for the adjective difficult is difficulty.
Yes, "fastest" is a real word. It is the superlative form of the adjective "fast," which means to move or perform quickly.
Noun clauses are found anywhere in the sentence and perform the same functions in sentences that nouns do:subject of a verbobject of a verbsubject complementobject of a prepositionan adjective complement
The indefinite pronoun 'either' is a singularform, a word for 'one' or the 'other'.The subject of the sentence is 'either'; the verb is 'can perform'.The plural noun 'girls' is the object of the preposition 'of', and does not determine the verb form.Note: The possessive adjective 'her' is singular, but I don't think that is the pronoun that the question was referring to.
The spelling "fair" is a noun (festival) or adjective (equitable, honest). The sound-alike word is "fare" meaning: - charge for bus, train, or taxi - local food - how individuals do or perform