I believe it's Suspicious.
The adjective form of "suspect" is "suspected."
In general, suspicious is used, although suspect can by itself e used as an adjective."He looked suspicious""He looked suspect"
The noun suspect has an adjective suspected, which has no adverb form. It also has the adjective "suspecting" which has the adverb form "suspectingly" (it is much more popular in the negative form "unsuspectingly"). Another related adjective, suspicious, has the adverb form "suspiciously."
The police suspect him of being involved in the robbery. She found some suspicious items in his bag and began to suspect his intentions. After conducting an investigation, the detectives were able to identify the main suspect in the case.
The antonym of suspect is trust.
The opposite of suspect is trust or believe.
In general, suspicious is used, although suspect can by itself e used as an adjective."He looked suspicious""He looked suspect"
No, although suspect can be an adjective as well as a noun. The most likely adverb for suspect is "suspiciously."
The word 'suspect' is a noun, a verb, and an adjective. EXAMPLES: noun: The police interviewed the suspect for hours. verb: We suspect that a leak in the roof caused these stains. adjective: The suspect information should be investigated further. A noun form for the verb to suspect is suspicion.
The adjective for suspicion is suspicious.
The police suspect him of being involved in the robbery. She found some suspicious items in his bag and began to suspect his intentions. After conducting an investigation, the detectives were able to identify the main suspect in the case.
The noun suspect has an adjective suspected, which has no adverb form. It also has the adjective "suspecting" which has the adverb form "suspectingly" (it is much more popular in the negative form "unsuspectingly"). Another related adjective, suspicious, has the adverb form "suspiciously."
suspect
No, it is not an adverb. Suspecting is a verb form and gerund (noun) for the verb "to suspect." There is an adverb form "unsuspectingly" (but not suspectingly) and the adverb "suspiciously."
The word 'suspect' is both a noun (suspect, suspects) and a verb (suspect, suspects, suspecting, suspected).To suspect someone of something is an action, so it is a verb.A suspect as in person who has been arrested for a crime in a noun.A verb is a word that describes an action (run, walk, etc), a state of being (exist, stand, etc) or occurrence (happen, become, etc).A noun is a word for a person (man, lady, teacher, etc), place (home, city, beach, etc) or thing (car, banana, book, etc).
The word 'fishy' is the adjective to describe something as fishy.
The teacher's hostile tone made the students uncomfortable.
No, it is a noun, or a verb (to book passage, to book a suspect). But it is widely used as an adjunct, e.g. book sale, book bag, book signing.