Busy is the adjective form. Example use:
You must wait for the light to change, this is a busyintersection.
The adjective form of concept is conceptual.The adjective form of conception is conceptional.
The comparative form of busy is busier.
The adjective form for the pronoun they is their.
The adjective form of concept is conceptual.The adjective form of conception is conceptional.
The adjective form is decisive.
No. Busy is an adjective. The adverb form is "busily."
No, the word 'busiest' is the superlative form of the adjective busy (busier, busiest).The abstract noun form of the adjective 'busy' is business.
The word "busy" is an adjective, applied to a noun, pronoun, or name. The adverb form is "busily".
The adjective busy has the abstract noun busyness, which became used as the separate word "business" to refer to occupational and commercial activity.
Busy is the adjective form. Example use:You must wait for the light to change, this is a busyintersection.
Busiest is not an adverb. It's the superlative form of the adjective busy.
an adjective is where there is a word in front of a noun and it describes. e.g. The dog crossed the busy road. busy is the adjective
Busy can't be a noun, which is a thing. Busy is an adjective, which describes things. "A busy street".
Business is a noun. It names an occupation.
The comparative form of busy is busier.
I think it's an adjective.
The adjective form of concept is conceptual.The adjective form of conception is conceptional.