The verb to bear:
The present participle bearing can be an adjective.
Also the past participle born, or borne (carried, endured).
The noun bear:
Other than bear as a noun adjunct, there are the rarely-seen adjectives ursal and ursine.
For the meaning "to carry" there is the past participle "borne" but no adverb. There is an adjective form bearable which has the adverb bearably.
For the meaning "large animal" bear, there is a related adjective bearish (like a bear) and the adverb bearishly.
Bear may be an adjective when used to modify a noun. For example, "bear scat" and "bear den" are phrases using bear as an adjective.
Ursine is the adjective meaning bearlike. Adjectives to describe bears include polar, black, brown, grizzly, and ferocious.
big
furry
terrifying
I would think so because it describes what kind of bear, like Black Bear, Polar Bear, and Grizzly Bear?
Hungry is an adjective- it is used to describe a noun ( and other adjectives) Example- The hungry bear ate the whole bowl of berries. Hungry = adjective bear = noun
Yes because poled is describing the bear and adjectives must descirb something.
Roman Empire rules
No. Born is the past participle of "to bear" and can be an adjective. There is no adverb form.
· beautiful · big · black · brown
No. Adjective. The great big bear ran away.
rare bear
The Latin equivalent of 'white bear' is Ursus albus. In the word-by-word translation, the noun 'ursus' means 'bear'. The adjective 'albus' means 'white'.
"Born" can function as a past participle, which is a form of the verb "to bear" (as in to give birth to). It can be used as both an adjective (e.g., "He is a born leader") and a verb (e.g., "She was born in New York").
The term "grizzly" is a noun when it means a "grizzly bear." The term is a descriptive adjective otherwise.
No, it is not. Originally named for Theodore Roosevelt, the "teddy bear" is a noun, and teddy is not an adjective describing the bear. The word can also refer to women's apparel, where it is also a noun.