No, it is an adverb. The adjective is just "fresh."
The word nonsensical *is* an adjective. It is the adjective form of the noun nonsense.
The adjective is "scientific."
Adjective.
adjective
No. Damage is a noun, or a verb whose past participle (damaged) can be an adjective. However, damage is sometimes used as an adjunct noun, as in damage control and damage radius.
Damaged.
You might use the following adjectives to describe the word damage: severe, minor, storm, tornado, major.Here is an example of a sentence in which the word stormis used as an adjective to describe damage. The customer filed an insurance claim for storm damage to her garage.
The word wanton is an adjective; a word to describe a noun as causing harm or damage for no reason (wanton behavior, wanton destruction).
Yes, the word 'storm' is a noun. It refers to a violent disturbance of the atmosphere, typically with strong winds, rain, thunder, lightning, or snow.
It's an adjective, meaning expensive; involving or causing loss, damage, suffering etc. 😁
No, it is not. Chip is a noun (a fragment or particle, or computer part), or a verb (to remove pieces, to damage by chipping). It can , however, be a noun adjunct in terms such as chip architecture.
Devastating is not a noun but instead it is an adjective.
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.
No, it is not an adjective. Differently is an adverb.The adjective would be different.
No. It is not an adjective. An adjective describes something.