It could be any of these: first, second, or third.
The three bases in Baseball are numbered numerically, as are the finishing positions in a race or contest. Cousins can be first, second, or any ordinal number.
Use the keyboard, not the microphone...
(Seldom used outside period literature, the adjective "base" means low or inferior, or contemptible. The noun base is used in such terms as base camp or base jumping.) Examples : (archaic) "He would not yield to such base impulses." "The gang was a group of base scoundrels."
Yes, "to knit" is a verb, as in "I'm going to knit a pair of mittens." because "going to knit" is the action in the sentence.It can also be an adjective, as in "I'm wearing the knit mittens." because "knit" describes the type of mittens.The base verb is knit.Knitting is the continuous form of knit and is used like this:I am knitting a pair of socks.The adjective form of knit is knitted.I am wearing the knitted mittens. Knitted describes the type of mittens.
adjective
Word is always a noun; a word base word is a noun.
Noun forms for the adjective unpleasant are unpleasantry and unpleasantness.
second
The base word of enormous is enormity. This word is an adjective. The adjective enormous, describes something as being big.
Binary describes a number with a base of two.
The word base is an adjective; based is the past tense of the verb 'base' (bases, based, basing).
An infinitive is a verb form that typically starts with "to" followed by the base form of the verb (e.g., to read, to go, to eat). It can function as a noun, adjective, or adverb in a sentence.
Yes, the base word of "daintily" is "dainty," which means delicately small or pretty. "Daintily" is the adverb form of "dainty" and describes how something is done delicately or with elegance.
The suffix -y is used to change a base word into an adjective that describes a characteristic or quality derived from the base word. For example, adding -y to "sun" creates the adjective "sunny" to describe something related to the sun.
(Seldom used outside period literature, the adjective "base" means low or inferior, or contemptible. The noun base is used in such terms as base camp or base jumping.) Examples : (archaic) "He would not yield to such base impulses." "The gang was a group of base scoundrels."
Yes. noun -> adjective acid -> acidic base -> alkali
"Salty" is an adjective. Eamples are "salty pretzel," "salty language," and "salty fisherman."You can sometimes identify a word as an adjective or an adverb by the base word.If the base word is a noun, then it's an adjective.Examples: salty lovely beastlyIf the base word is an adjective or a verb, then it's an adverb.Examples: lovingly scornfully ridiculously anxiously
The word based can be an adjective and a verb. The adjective form means founded upon. The verb form is the past tense of the verb base.
The word based can be an adjective and a verb. The adjective form means founded upon. The verb form is the past tense of the verb base.