Yes, chocolatey (also chocolaty) is an adjective, generally used where the taste or appearance is being noted. The word chocolate itself is used as an adjective, where it refers to things made, flavored, or colored with chocolate. The color chocolate (brown) is an adjective when it is used with a noun.
The word chocolate is a noun, and also an adjunct or adjective, along with chocolaty. There is no adverb form.
It can be an adjective or a noun.
No, the word 'your' is not a noun at all. The word 'your' is a pronoun, a possessive adjective, a word that describes a noun as belonging to you.Examples:You got your chocolate in my peanut-butter!Have it your way!What's in your wallet?The possessive adjective are: my, your, his, hers, its, our, their.
The word circular is an adjective because it is describing something.e.g.- "The doughnut I ate for breakfast was chocolate and circular."An adjective describes an noun, and in this case, circular is describing the doughnut.
The word 'chocolate' is a noun, a common, concrete noun; an uncountable noun as a word for the substance (a material noun) chocolate; a count noun as a word for candies made from chocolate. Some noun synonyms for chocolate are: beverage brown candy flavor ingredient nut seed treat
It can be. Cocoa is a noun (ingredient or hot drink), and cocoa is an adjective referring to cocoa or its color.
The adjective form for the verb to notice is the past participle, noticed.Example: His lie was revealed by the easily noticed chocolate on his face.The adjective form for the noun notice is noticeable.Example: The noticeable effects of his illness were not easy to hide.
No. It is a noun, or an adjective for things made with chocolate, or having the color chocolate.
A companion noun is the word that an adjective describes. Examples: There was a beautiful sunset this evening. The noun sunset is the companion noun for the adjective beautiful. Jim is a funny guy. The noun guy is the companion noun for the adjective funny. My favorite is chocolate cake. The noun cake is the companion noun for the adjective chocolate.
The word 'choice' is both a noun (choice, choices) and an adjective (choice, choicer, choicest). Examples:noun: You have a choice of chocolate and strawberry.adjective: A few choice words set everything straight.
The second person possessive pronoun is yours, a word that takes the place of a noun that belongs to you. Example:The cupcake with the chocolate icing is yours.The second person possessive adjective is your, a word that is placed before a noun to describe the noun as belonging to you. Example:Your cupcake is has the chocolate icing.