an extremely hot fire. hot being the adjective
The word 'fiery' is NOT a noun.The word 'fiery' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun.The word 'fiery' is the adjective form of the noun 'fire'.The word 'fire' is both a noun and a verb.
Examples of adjectives that are formed from a noun are:air (noun) - airy (adjective)artist (noun) - artistic (adjective)beauty (noun) - beautiful (adjective)blood (noun) - bloody (adjective)fish (noun) - fishy (adjective)hope (noun) - hopeful (adjective)length (noun) - lengthy (adjective)memory (noun) - memorable (adjective)politics (noun) - political (adjective)thought (noun) - thoughtful (adjective)use (noun) - useful (adjective)water (noun) - watery (adjective)
No, it is a verb or a noun (to go around, to surround; a round shape). The adjective form is circular.
The noun form for the adjective authentic is authenticity.
"pond" is a noun. An adjective describes a noun. the pond is shallow...shallow being the adjective and pond being the verb. Any "thing" is a noun.
No. Structure is a noun, and acts as a noun adjunct (attributive noun) when used with other nouns, as in structure fire. The adjective form for most uses is structural.
The word 'fiery' is NOT a noun.The word 'fiery' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun.The word 'fiery' is the adjective form of the noun 'fire'.The word 'fire' is both a noun and a verb.
The main adjective related to the noun fire (flame) is fiery. Another would be fireproof.The word fire is often used as an adjunct (e.g. fire alarm, fire extinguisher).For other uses of fire (to shoot, or to dismiss an employee), the primary adjective is the past participle, fired.
Examples of adjectives that are formed from a noun are:air (noun) - airy (adjective)artist (noun) - artistic (adjective)beauty (noun) - beautiful (adjective)blood (noun) - bloody (adjective)fish (noun) - fishy (adjective)hope (noun) - hopeful (adjective)length (noun) - lengthy (adjective)memory (noun) - memorable (adjective)politics (noun) - political (adjective)thought (noun) - thoughtful (adjective)use (noun) - useful (adjective)water (noun) - watery (adjective)
No, it is a verb or a noun (to go around, to surround; a round shape). The adjective form is circular.
No, the word 'miraculously' is the adverb form of the adjective 'miraculous'.The word 'miraculous' is the adjective form of the noun 'miracle'.Examples:There were miraculously few injuries. (adverb, modifies the adjective 'few')She made a miraculous escape under heavy fire. (adjective, modifies the noun 'escape')Some believe that his recovery was a miracle. (noun, direct object of the verb 'was')
The word 'Buddhistic' is the adjective form of the noun Buddhism.The adjective 'Buddhistic' is a proper adjective; the noun 'Buddhism' is a proer noun. A proper adjective and a proper noun are always capitalized.
it is a noun and an adjective
I think technically it is an adjective to describe guns, weapons, missiles, artillery, fire, etc., but I have often seen it used by itself as a noun (and its acronym AA) when it is obvious or irrelavent as to what the adjective is describing.
Creativity is a noun.
Adjective and noun
It can be a noun or an adjective.