Commemorative is the adjective for commemorate.
The likely word is "celebrate" (to commemorate or fete).The similar word is the adjective celibate, meaning unmarried or sexually abstinent.
No, "monuments" is not an adjective; it is a noun. It refers to structures or statues that are built to commemorate a person, event, or significant aspect of history. Adjectives are words that describe or modify nouns, whereas "monuments" serves as a subject or object in a sentence.
"Commemorate" in Tagalog can be translated as "alasin" or "alalahanin."
Commemorate is a verb.
The verb of commemorative is commemorate. As in "to commemorate something".
Commemorate + to remember as a group very typical at funerals we are here to commemorate the life of John
We commemorate the sailors who died on board the USS Arizona with a memorial. On July 4, we commemorate the birth of the United States as a nation.
What, if anything, are you doing to commemorate Veterans Day?
It commemorate the trip that Balto took in the great syrum run.
We commemorate the lives and contributions of soldiers on Remembrance day
On Memorial Day, we commemorate those who have died in war.
There are four syllables in commemorate: com-mem-o-rate