No, it is not. The word reach can be a verb or a noun.
Adjectives and adverbs are the words that have degrees. The word 'reach' is not an adjective or an adverb.The word 'reach' is a verb and a noun.The forms of the verb are: reach, reaches, reaching, reached.The forms of the noun are: reach, reaches.The adjective forms of the verb to reach are the present participle 'reaching', and the past participle 'reached'. The degrees of these adjectives are:comparative: more reaching, more reachedsuperlative: most reaching, most reachedExample uses:We will reach the hotel around six. (verb)Keep this out of the reach of the children. (noun)A reaching child can find all sorts of dangerous things. (adjective)Columbus thought that the reached land was India. (adjective)
Accessible is primarily an adjective. It describes something that is easy to reach, approach, or use, such as accessible information or accessible transportation. It can also function as a noun in certain contexts, referring to a person or thing that is available or easy to approach, such as "a helpful accessible."
Cautious IS an adjective. An adjective is an action!
The word "it" is not an adjective (it is a pronoun). A word is an adjective if it modifies (defines, characterizes) a noun or pronoun. The big tent - big is an adjective He is tall - tall is an adjective This key - this (while arguably called a determiner) is a demonstrative adjective
Reach
No, it is not. The word reach can be a verb or a noun.
Adjectives and adverbs are the words that have degrees. The word 'reach' is not an adjective or an adverb.The word 'reach' is a verb and a noun.The forms of the verb are: reach, reaches, reaching, reached.The forms of the noun are: reach, reaches.The adjective forms of the verb to reach are the present participle 'reaching', and the past participle 'reached'. The degrees of these adjectives are:comparative: more reaching, more reachedsuperlative: most reaching, most reachedExample uses:We will reach the hotel around six. (verb)Keep this out of the reach of the children. (noun)A reaching child can find all sorts of dangerous things. (adjective)Columbus thought that the reached land was India. (adjective)
Do you mean 'objective' or 'adjective'. I have never heard of 'odjective;. ???? 'Objective' is a goal, or target to reach. 'Adjective' is word qualifying a noun.
The adjective is final.The noun is destination.
Accessible is primarily an adjective. It describes something that is easy to reach, approach, or use, such as accessible information or accessible transportation. It can also function as a noun in certain contexts, referring to a person or thing that is available or easy to approach, such as "a helpful accessible."
To denote distance that an object is - one that is far away. "It takes millions of years for the light from distantstars to reach us here on Earth"
They are not close in meaning. An objective is a goal, a target, something you wish to reach or accomplish. As an adjective, objective means detatched from personal biases and feelings. A Principle is a general rule or guide to action. Principle cannot be used as an adjective although its homonym principal can.
Yes, missed is a verb (miss, misses, missing, missed). Missed is also an adjective. Example uses: Verb: I'm late because I missed the bus. Adjective: That was a missed opportunity.
No - it does not stand in place of a noun. Depending on how you use the word, it is a noun (a hole in the ground to reach a water supply) or an adjective (describing a noun) or an adverb (qualifying a verb).
No, it is a verb or a noun (to go around, to surround; a round shape). The adjective form is circular.
No, it is not an adjective. Differently is an adverb.The adjective would be different.