The word meaning "with constant frequency" is an adjective.
The word meaning "a frequent customer" is a noun.
Regular is an adjective, and more rarely a noun (a regular soldier, or regular patron).
There is no verb of 'regular'. regular is either a noun or a adjective
it describes a noun
yes
No. It is a created word used as a noun. It has no regular adjective form.
No. Regular is a noun or an adjective (common, usual). The adverb is "regularly."
Regular is an adjective, as in to put something in its regular place. Regular in a noun, as in the restaurant can always find a table for a regular customer.
regular
The correct spelling of the adjective is ordinary(regular, normal).
"Noisy" can function as both an adjective and a predicate adjective. When used before a noun, it functions as a regular adjective (e.g., "a noisy neighbor"). When used after linking verbs such as "is" or "seems," it functions as a predicate adjective (e.g., "The class is noisy").
It depends on the context it is used in. The word 'regular' is both a noun and an adjective.The noun 'regular' is a word for a clothing size, a habitual customer, a dependable, loyal person.Example:He's a regular at the local tavern. (noun)The regular driver is off this week. (adjective)
The word cramped is a regular verb. It can also be an adjective to describe something that is restricted in size.