spacecrafterific, spacecrafty, spacecaftactular, scpacecraftubular, spacecraftabulous, spacecraftic, spacecraftickazootical.........
an"irregular adjective" is an adjective of relation that is not derivid from the same root as the correspounding noun (or is based on the same root but in a way that is non-intivitive even to a native english speaker.) these are also called collateral adjectives.
Proper adjectives are similar to proper nouns. You would use the same root word.
The English adjectives belligerent and bellicosederive from the Latin root syllable 'bell-'. The syllable also may be seen in Latin derivatives. For example, the derivative noun bellum means 'war'. The derivative adjectives belliger, bellatorius, and bellatorrespectively mean 'waging war', 'warlike', and 'warrior'.
The root noun of "fortunate" is "fortune."
The root noun for "angry" is "anger."
Rap- is the Latin root that means 'to seize'. Latin derivatives include the infinitive 'rapere' for 'to seize, snatch'; the adverb 'raptim' for 'violently'; and the noun 'raptor' for 'robber'. English derivatives include the adjectives 'rapt' and 'raptorial', and the noun 'raptor'.
Yes the word root is a common noun
The root noun of the adjective "indistinct" is "distinct."
I think it is noun but I would have it checked
The noun form of the adjective 'imaginative' is imaginativeness.The root word for the verb to imagine and the adjective imaginative is the noun image.
A derived noun is a noun that is based mostly on verbs.Examples of derived nouns:combinationconclusiondegradationestimationformalizationglamorizationimplicationjustificationnavigationnominationorganizationpopularizationunificationvisualization
No. They can be adjectives, verbs, adverbs, etc.Example of a root as a verb: Root: cap. Meaning: take, seize. Word: capture, captivate