The word weed is a noun, a verb, or an adjective. Example uses:
Noun: A weed is not always a menace, my mother made a great dandelion salad.
Verb: I have to weed the garden before that's all that grows there.
Adjective: Get a bottle of weed spray while you're at the garden shop.
The simple past tense and past participle of "weed" is "weeded."
As you add -ed to make the past tense it is a regular verb.
No, it is a verb or a noun (to go around, to surround; a round shape). The adjective form is circular.
The word 'census' is a noun. It is not a verb or an adjective.
"brief" can function as an adjective, noun, or verb.
Capital can function as a noun, verb, or adjective. As a noun, it refers to wealth, resources, or the capital city of a country. As a verb, it can mean to provide funding or to write in capital letters. As an adjective, it describes something related to a capital city or money.
Eager is an adjective, the noun is eagerness, there is no verb.
penetrate is an adjective
A noun derivative modifies or describes a noun, while an adjective derivative modifies or describes a noun. For example, in the word "developmental psychology," "developmental" is the adjective derivative describing the noun "psychology." In the word "decision-making process," "decision" is the noun derivative modifying the noun "process."
Distribute = verb Distribution = noun Distributable = adjective
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
Loyalty is a noun that describes someone's faithfulness, allegiance, or commitment to a person, organization, or cause.
This versatile word can be a noun or verb , and veiled as an adjective.