appearance
Both "more moist" and "moister" appear to be accepted, though "moister" sounds much like "moisture".
No, the word appearance is not an adverb.The word appearance is a noun.
The correct spelling of the adjective is "old-fashioned."The name for the mixed drink (an Old Fashioned) may not appear hyphenated.
No, it is a verb or a noun (to go around, to surround; a round shape). The adjective form is circular.
It is an adjective.It is a an adjective.
It is apparent.
RA9163 would appear to be a catalogue number, not a word. It has no adjective.
It is always an adjective. It can appear to be an appositive noun (e.g. Carnac the Magnificent) but this is part of a title using the adjective (e.g. The Magnificent Ambersons).
Yes. It is an adjective based on the verb appear and the noun appearance. It refers to how something seems or seemed.
No. Although bluish could appear to be modifying white as an adjective, bluish is an adjective and white could be a noun (a color) or adjective (colored).
"Appeared" is the past participle of the verb"appear."
Today's conventional authorities in grammar are quite clear: there is no such thing as an adjective that modifies another adjective. While ordinary language (and informal writing) may sometimes appear to attach one adjective to another, in every case a true adjective can (and will) only ever modify a noun.
One example of a two-syllable adjective starting with "d" that may appear first in a dictionary is "decisive."
The verb "appear" is a linking verb in this sentence because it connects the subject "girls" with the predicate adjective "excited." It describes a state of being rather than an action.
An adjective alone can follow a linking verb (such as appear, be, become, feel, grow, or seem ) when the adjective describes the subject, e.g. He seems stupid. An adjective which modifies a following noun may follow an ordinary transitive verb, e.g. He reads stupid magazines.
Waifish is an adjective ending in H that means thin. For instance, "Her waifish build made her appear much younger than her 16 years."
The possessive adjective your is a second person pronoun.