It can be (e.g. the path taken, the seat is taken). It is also the past participle of "to take" and can be part of some tenses (I have taken, they had taken, it will be taken).
No, the word please is either a verb or an interjection. There is an adjective form (pleased) taken from the past participle of the verb "to please" (satisfy or make happy).
TAKE : to accept, withdraw, or seize (adjective form "taken").
No, actually the adjectives 'fat' and 'mean' are not similar descriptions, they have to be taken separately. The word 'fat' is a noun as well as an adjective; the abstract noun for the adjective mean is meanness.
Little is an adjective, bit is a noun, "little bit" taken together is a noun phrase.
Facetious means not meant to be taken seriously or literally, amusing; humorous.Sorry if that sounds facetious, but it is a valid point.
No, the word 'taken' is the past participle of the verb to take. The past participle is also an adjective. Examples: Verb: I have already taken that course. Adjective: The victims had no proof of their taken property.
Take is the past participle of the verb, to take. As such it can be used as an adjective. It has also come to used as an adjective in itself.Examples: This seat is takenShe was quite taken with her new tennis teacher.
The adjective is taken (occupied, reserved, refers to the seat). Although taken is a verb form, it is the past participle and the verb "is taken" does not apply here (as it would for 'The train will be taken more often than the bus'). We are not taking the seat anywhere.
In that sentence, "Arctic" is the proper adjective.
No, the word please is either a verb or an interjection. There is an adjective form (pleased) taken from the past participle of the verb "to please" (satisfy or make happy).
"Transferable" is an adjective and "skills" is a noun. Taken together, they are a noun phrase.
TAKE : to accept, withdraw, or seize (adjective form "taken").
"Spoken" can be both an adjective and a past participle. As an adjective, it describes something communicated verbally. As a past participle, it is used with a helping verb to show that an action has taken place in the past.
It can be, in the sense of someone battered, hurt, or hit (e.g. the struck pedestrian was taken to the hospital). This is usually different from the other participle, stricken, also used as an adjective.
No, actually the adjectives 'fat' and 'mean' are not similar descriptions, they have to be taken separately. The word 'fat' is a noun as well as an adjective; the abstract noun for the adjective mean is meanness.
The French word for hot is "chaud." In French, it is masculine.
No, "surprised" is not a preposition. It is actually an adjective used to describe the feeling of being taken off guard or astonished.