The word "scrapped" can be used as a verb or an adjective. An example as a past-tense verb would be "The delivery company scrapped several of its old trucks." As an adjective, an example would be "We examined several scrapped cars before finding the used part we needed."
It is an adjective, it describes a noun.
Adjective
Accidental is an adjective. The noun form is accident. Accidentally is an adverb. There is no verb variation of the word. You can 'get into an accident', or you can 'have an accident', but there is no single verb 'to accident'.
adjective
Dry is a noun an adjective and verb.
No, it is a verb or a noun (to go around, to surround; a round shape). The adjective form is circular.
"brief" can function as an adjective, noun, or verb.
The word 'census' is a noun. It is not a verb or an adjective.
Eager is an adjective, the noun is eagerness, there is no verb.
penetrate is an adjective
Distribute = verb Distribution = noun Distributable = adjective
This versatile word can be a noun or verb , and veiled as an adjective.
Examples of words that function as a noun, a verb, or an adjective are:averagebettercounterexpressglassgreenhomelikepalepresentshorttime
Reaction is a noun, reactive is an adjective, but react itself is a verb.
noun, it is a thing. a verb is what you do and an adjective is discriptive words
The word 'cloud' is a noun and a verb. The adjective form is cloudy.
The word plunge can be a noun or a verb. It is not an adjective or adverb.