The adjective form of "fat" is "fat." For example, "She ate a fat slice of cake."
The word "fat" can be used as both an adjective and a noun.
Adjective; it is a way to describe meat or a person. "Lean, mean, fighting machine" "This meat is very lean yet is full of flavor!"
"Looked" is a verb in the past tense form. It is the past tense of the verb "look."
The correct spelling of the adjective is "chunky" (in or containing large chunks).The word is sometimes used as a euphemism for fat, along with portly, hefty, and heavyset.
The Spanish word "gorda" is the feminine form of "gordo" and translates to "fat" or "chubby" in English. However, it can also be used affectionately to refer to someone as "darling" or "sweetheart" in certain contexts. The meaning of the word depends on the tone and intention behind its use.
Fat is a noun. It's also an adjective; that is, it modifies, or describes, a noun. For instance, one might say, "the fat man," where fat is the adjective and man is the noun.
adjective Fat could also be a noun. Fat on your body is a noun. Being fat is an adjective.
As an adjective, reamhar (fat, plump).
The word "fat" can be used as both an adjective and a noun.
No, actually the adjectives 'fat' and 'mean' are not similar descriptions, they have to be taken separately. The word 'fat' is a noun as well as an adjective; the abstract noun for the adjective mean is meanness.
It is an adjective meaning "fat" in Spanish.
yes Ex. He was fat but genuis
No, you can't say something like he talked fat. It is an adjective or a noun But you can say something like he grew fat!
There is nothing abstract about fat. The noun fat is a concrete noun, a word for a particular physical substance.
a negative adjective would be fat or chunky while a positive adjective meaning the same thing would be big build or heavy set.
One Latin equivalent of the English 'fat person' is obesus. Adjectives and nouns in Latin show gender. The example in Latin is the masculine form of the adjective. The feminine and neuter forms of the adjective are 'obesa' and 'obesum', respectively. Another Latin equivalent is pinguis. This adjective refers to heavy, solid, thick fat. In contrast, 'obesus' refers to fat in the sense of plump.
no, because fat is describing something not a common noun