Heavy.
Foggy is the adjective of fog.
Heavy.
No, the word 'thick' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun (a thick fog, a thick gravy).The noun form of the adjective 'thick' is thickness.
The word 'fog' is both a verb and a noun.The noun 'fog' is a word for fine particles of water floating in the atmosphere near the ground; a word for a state of mental confusion; a word for a thing.Examples:We can leave when the fog clears a bit. (noun)The hot coffee began to fog the car's windows. (verb)
No, foggy is not a noun; foggy is an adjective, a word to describe a noun (a foggy day or a foggy memory). The adjective foggy doesn't have singular and plural forms, an adjective has comparative forms: foggy, foggier, foggiest.The noun form for the adjective foggy is fogginess. Another noun form is fog.
Yes, it is. It normally means of or having fog (foggy nights, foggy weather), and metaphorically unclear or imprecise (foggy memory).
No, the word foggy is not a noun. Foggy is an adjective, a word that describes a noun (foggy morning).The noun form for the adjective foggy is fogginess. A related noun form is fog.
Freezing fog, advection fog, and evaporation fog!
The word 'foggy' is not a noun. The word 'foggy' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun, such as a foggy day. The word 'foggy' is the adjective form of the noun fog, a common noun, a general word for a type of atmospheric condition.
London fog : radiation fog enhanced by pollutants. Wisconsin fog : evaporation fog near water.
Pea soup fog is fog that is extremely thick, or heavy.
No. It is an adverbial (adverb phrase). This in the term is an adjective, and morning is a noun. But together they answer the question "when" for a verb. e.g. "They left this morning." (morning is not an object)