The adjective for "sign" is "symbolic" or "indicative."
"Conventional" is an adjective. It is used to describe something that is based on or in accordance with what is generally done or believed.
Sign can be an verb or a noun depending on how it is used in a sentence. Did Eli Manning sign your football? (sign = verb) If you read the sign, you'll know where to go. (sign = noun)
it is an adjective!
Adjective.
The usual adjective is intrusive. The present participle intruding can also be an adjective.
a
doesn't
doesn't
The adjective meaning, "of, like, or resembling a hexagon" is hexagonal.
"Conventional" is an adjective. It is used to describe something that is based on or in accordance with what is generally done or believed.
This is a matter of idiom only: "open" is recognized as an adjective, with the same substantive meaning as "opened", as well as a verb, while "close" is not. "Close" does have an adjective meaning, with a different pronunciation, but that adjective does not mean substantively the same thing as "closed"; instead it means "near" or "nearby".
Yes, the sentence does have a predicate adjective. A predicate adjective is an adjective that follows a linking verb and restates the subject. A linking verb is a verb that acts like an equal sign; the subject of the sentence is or becomes the object of the verb (TEACHER = ANGRY).
Sign can be an verb or a noun depending on how it is used in a sentence. Did Eli Manning sign your football? (sign = verb) If you read the sign, you'll know where to go. (sign = noun)
No, the word grisly is an adjective, a word that describes a noun as causing horror or disgust.It was a grisly accident that impaled the driver with a stop sign.
The word 'deaf' is a noun form as a word for people who are deaf considered as a group.example: I'm taking sign language lessons for communicating with the deaf.The noun form of the adjective deaf is deafness.
No, stop is not an adjective. Stop can be either a verb or a noun. (stop, stopped, stopped; bus stop) When used with another noun (e.g. stop sign), it is called a noun adjunct (attributive noun).
The verb that joins a subject to a predicate noun or a predicate adjective is called a linking verb.A linking verb is a verb that acts as an equal sign, the subject is or becomes the object.A predicate noun or a predicate adjective is a subject complement.Example subject complements:Mary is my sister. (Mary = sister, predicate noun)Mary's feet got wet. (feet = wet, predicate adjective)