Yes
The verb form is personalize.(Or personalise in British English)
Not personal; not representing a person; not having personality., That which wants personality; specifically (Gram.), an impersonal verb.
relate. Ex: i relate to your personality because we both like Manga.
'Sunny' is an adjective. 'Yesterday was sunny, whereas today is cloudy.' 'My sister has a very sunny personality.' 'Sunny' cannot be used as a verb.
No, the word "ignored" is a verb, but "ignorable" is an adjective.
The correct declension of the verb "to be" when used with a plural subject (personality styles) is "are". Thus your question is grammatically incorrect. Also "personality styles" are a matter of opinion not fact so they can be anything you want to call them - if they even exist.
The noun "personality" is related to the adjective "personal."The closest related verb is likely "personalize" meaning to make special to an individual, e.g. to personalize a shirt by embroidering your name on it.
The past participle (controlled) and the present participle (controlling) can function as adjectives.-- a controlled chaos-- a controlling personality.
No, it can be used as either a noun or a verb.
Humble personality is basically simple personality or boring personality.
The noun 'is' is a verb, a form of the verb 'to be'. The verb 'is' functions as an auxiliary verb and a linking verb.
There is no abstract noun forms for the verb to breathe. The noun forms of the verb to breathe are breather, breath, and the gerund, breathing; all concrete nouns for a physical thing or a physical action. The concrete noun 'breath' is sometimes used in an abstract context, for example: Her personality is like a breath of fresh air.