To choose means to pick, prefer or select from a number of possible options. The adjective for choose is choosy.
The adjective in that sentence is empty.
It is chosen.
It can be used as an adjective, it is the past participle of the verb - to choose.
The verb is to choose, the past participle is chosen, and the gerund is choosing.
Yes, kind is an adjective, as it descibes a word. There are 2 different ways to use "Kind" in a sentence. There is "There are many differnent kinds to choose from" or there is "That was a very kind gesture". But yes, kind is an adjective. Hope that helps! NinaAnnaGillian
No, it is a verb. The participle (chosen) can be used as an adjective.
It is "chosen".
The adjective in that sentence is empty.
It is chosen.
It can be used as an adjective, it is the past participle of the verb - to choose.
The likely word is the adjective choosy (picky) from the verb to choose.
The verb is to choose, the past participle is chosen, and the gerund is choosing.
bad
Yes, kind is an adjective, as it descibes a word. There are 2 different ways to use "Kind" in a sentence. There is "There are many differnent kinds to choose from" or there is "That was a very kind gesture". But yes, kind is an adjective. Hope that helps! NinaAnnaGillian
The adjective "intelligent" comes from the Latin intellegere 'understand,' from inter 'between' + legere 'choose.'
Troubling, troublesome, troubled. They have different meanings, so make sure you choose the right one.
exhausting