The adjective to the word "hero" is "hero-like".
Reference is dictionary.com
No. Hero is a noun. The adjective form is heroic.(in the compound noun hero sandwich, hero is acting as a noun adjunct)
No. Heroine is a noun, a person (the female gender of hero). The same word, heroic, is used as an adjective for heroine or hero.
The word 'heroic' is the adjective form of the noun 'hero'.The noun 'hero' is a concrete noun as a word for a person.The abstract noun form of the noun 'hero' is heroism.
Epic can be a noun and an adjective. Noun: An extended poem celebrating the feats of a hero. Adjective: Relating to an epic.
Brave is one adjective that can be used to describe a hero. Other adjectives that can be used include, fearless, loyal, and reliable.
It is Past Participle used as adjective, also called verb-adjective or Verbal.The undaunted hero chased the defeated enemy.
The pronoun in the sentence is "their," which is used to refer to the woman hero in the story.
If you mean super as an adjective. It is the same word. Super Hero = Super Heroi (eroi)
Promethean.
Semper tuo heroi ero (i'm assuming that you, or the hero is singular, if its not then replace 'heroi' with heroibus and 'ero' with erimus)
The adjective quixotic is derived from Don Quixote by Cervantes. I don't know if he is the first but that is where the word comes from.
An adjective is a word that describes someone or something.The adjective forms of the verb to admire are:an admirable actadmiring fansan admired leaderThe adjective forms of the verb to honor are: an honorable manthe honoring committeean honored hero