The adjective form of wisdom is "wise."
Wise.
No, it is a noun
First off, wisdom is a noun and smart is an adjective. Wisdom is the ability to discern or judge what is true, right, or lasting. A person who has wisdom has insight, common sense and good judgment. A person with wisdom is smart, but a smart person may not be wise. I think wisdom comes with age. A young person can be smart but rarely ever wise. Smart is characterized by sharp quick thought. A smart person is intelligent, clever, witty and shrewd. A smart person could probably guess or figure out what to do in a situation, but a wise person with wisdom would know what to do.
You will find the words and wisdom of Solomon in Proverbs and Ecclesiastes.
The adjective form of wisdom is "wise."
The adjective referring to wisdom is wise.
No, it is a noun
Wise.
Wisdom is the noun related to the adjective wise. The adverb form is wisely.
The word 'wisdom' is the noun form of the adjective wise.
Yes, it is. It means having wisdom, based on intelligence, experience, and/or perception.
The word 'wisdom' is a noun, a common, uncountable, abstract noun; a word for the ability to make good decisions based on knowledge and experience; knowledge gained over a long period of time.
The word 'wiser' is not a noun, it's the comparative form of the adjective: wise, wiser, wisest.Wiseness is the abstract noun form for the adjective, wise. Another abstract noun is wisdom.
The word mature is an adjective. It can also be a verb as in to gain experience or wisdom.
The likely word is the adverb wisely (with experience or wisdom).A similar word is the adjective weaselly (devious, untrustworthy).
wisdom is a noun. an adjective describes a noun, and so you don't say, for example, "Taylor is very wisdom." you would say Taylor is very wise. calm, yes. humor, no, also a noun, but humorous is, unless you are referring to the elbow bone.