I believe the adjective form of illustrate is illustrational.
SSH
Oh dang. A suffix... That is hard to answer. I think -ate or -te?
Illustration
illustration
adjective phrase noun phrase adverb phrase.........
No, the word illustrate is a verb (illustrates, illustrating, illustrated).
In math, illustrate means: To show your work in pictures or figures.
The word demonstrate is a verb (demonstrate, demonstrates, demonstrating, demonstrated) meaning to show clearly; to prove or make clear by reasoning or evidence; to illustrate and explain with examples; or to make a public display.The noun forms for the verb to demonstrate are demonstrator, demonstration, and the gerund, demonstrating.The adjective forms are demonstrable and demonstrated.
contradictory
Yes, illustrated can be used as an adjective. For example, an illustrated book. Illustrated is also the past tense of illustrate.
No, the word 'illustrate' is a verb: illustrate, illustrates, illustrating, illustrated.The noun forms of the verb to illustrate are illustrator, illustration, and the gerund, illustrating.
adjective phrase noun phrase adverb phrase.........
Yes, the word 'visual' is an adjective and a noun.The noun 'visual' is a word for something used to illustrate an idea, a presentation, or a promotion; a word for a thing.
It can be any of the three: it is the present participle of the verb "to illustrate." Verb - My favorite artist will be illustrating the new book. Noun - Illustrating children's books was his favorite job. Adjective - The speaker provided many illustrating examples of management failure.
Illustrate is a verb.
what is the enumerate and illustrate
The verb of illustration is illustrate. As in "to illustrate something".
The past tense of illustrate is illustrated.
No, the word illustrate is a verb (illustrates, illustrating, illustrated).
Words that illustrate types of music
It's jack's job to illustrate the new book. Let me illustrate with a real life example.