The word 'sharpness' is the noun form of the adjective sharp.
A verb is a action, sharp is a adjective
"Sharp" can function as both an adjective and a verb. As an adjective, it describes a noun (e.g., sharp knife). As a verb, it can mean to make something sharper or more intense (e.g., sharpen a pencil).
Yes.
The adjective sharp is the basis for the noun sharpness.Sharpness means the state or degree of being sharp, or of being visually distinct.
i had to be pretty sharp to answer the word problem correctly.
Adjective because sharp describes something. For example, " That pencil is sharp." It is justifying that the pencil really is sharp.
The word vorpal is an adjective. It means to be sharp or deadly.
No. "Sharp" is an adjective describing "blows," which is a noun. Together as "sharp blows" they comprise a noun phrase consisting of the noun "blows" and its adjectival premodifier "sharp."
edged, razor-sharp
No. "Sharp" is an adjective describing "blows," which is a noun. Together as "sharp blows" they comprise a noun phrase consisting of the noun "blows" and its adjectival premodifier "sharp."
That is the correct spelling of the adjective "pointy" (pointed, sharp).
No, "shrieked" is not an adjective. It is the past tense of the verb "shriek," which means to utter a loud, sharp cry.