The word 'scholarly' is the adjective form for the noun scholar.
The noun form for the adjective scholarly is scholarliness.
The direct adjective form is "scholarly." A related adjective is "scholastic" which in modern use refers more to schooling and study than to scholars as persons.
You are a scholar and a gentleman, both smart and kind. He was the brightest scholar at the university.
A Greek Scholar was a person (usually male) who studied a particular subject and made interesting discoveries.i.e. Pythagoras
A scholar is # A student; one who studies at school or college. # A specialist in a particular branch ofknowledge. # A learned person. # One who educates themself for their whole life.
No, it is a verb or a noun (to go around, to surround; a round shape). The adjective form is circular.
No, it is not an adjective. Differently is an adverb.The adjective would be different.
scholarly :-)
The correct spelling is "scholastic," which is an adjective used to describe something related to education or schools, or pertaining to scholarship or learning.
The word learned is the past tense, past participle of the verb to learn which is also an adjective (a learned scholar). The noun form for the adjective is learnedness, a word for profound scholarly knowledge.
The word historians is a noun, a plural form for a historian; a word for a writer, student, or scholar of history; a word for a person.
The word school is often used as an adjective/ noun adjunct (school subjects, school uniform), but there is no adverb form. The generally synonymous adjective scholastic and adverb scholastically are often used, which are based on the noun scholar.
The antonym for scholar is layperson or nonacademic.
there are many classes for scholars. that girl is a scholar. anyone that is a scholar is smart. i am a scholar.
The Scholar was created in 2005.
Simply a Biblical Scholar.
The abbreviation for scholar is "schol."
In ancient China, scholar officials were highly educated individuals who passed rigorous exams to serve in government positions based on their intellectual abilities rather than their social status or connections.
The American Scholar was created in 1837.