There is no adjective to mosque. Mosque is the building where Muslims go for praying.
An American flag hangs outside the building. American is an adjective describing flag.
All of them may be adjectives in some usage. They are all present participles of verbs. - building waves, building storms (to build) - breathing animals (to breathe) - stagnating economy (to stagnate) - coping survivors (to cope)
No. It is not an adjective. An adjective describes something.
No it's not a adjective, an adjective is a describing word.
low-rise adjective (BUILDING)low-rise adjective (TROUSERS)
There is no adjective to mosque. Mosque is the building where Muslims go for praying.
The verb form can be an adjective, meaning torn. The slang use (in body building) is also an adjective.
No. Build is generally used as a verb, as in to build a house. The adjective forms are the past participle (built, as in the house was well built) or the present participle (building, as in building materials).
The adjective form of the noun 'convenience' is convenient.Example: There's a convenient cafe in the building where I work.
An American flag hangs outside the building. American is an adjective describing flag.
An adjective is a word that describes a noun. eg. A RED bus, a TALL building, a GREAT party.
Yes. Adjectives are describing words. In the sentence "That is a tall building," the word tall is describing the height of the building.
Concrete is a noun and an adjective. As a noun: the building was constructed with concrete. As an adjective: He made a concrete argument to the jury.
Luxury is typically a noun, but it can be used as an adjective -- a luxury home, a luxury hotel.Luxurious is the adjective form.See related link for Oxford Dictionary's definition of luxury.
Demolished is a verb (past tense of demolish) and an adjective (a demolished building).
Yes, enough is an adverb of degree. It can be used as adjective also. Examples: The building is tall enough to need an elevator. (adverb) We did not have enough rope (adjective)