threatening
No, it is a noun (something potentially harmful, or a threatening comment) . But it can be a noun adjunct in terms such as threat level or threat assessment.
The adjective form of the word threat is the word threatening.
'Threat', of course. The litmus tests for a noun: can it take an article, adjective or possessive (the threat; the dire threat, the threat's dissuasive power); can it be used as the subject or object of a sentence? (the threat was taken seriously; they perceived a threat in his tone), can it take a relative clause modifier? (the threat that she would fail was an incentive)
Threat is a noun. The verb form is threaten.He made a threat that he would throw out her Beanie Baby collection.She threatened to break his golf clubs.
The plural form of the noun 'threat' is threats.The verb forms are threaten, threatens, threatening, threatened.The adjective forms are the present participle of the verb, threatening (a threatening storm), and the past participle of the verb, threatened (a threatened species).
A grave threat is a threat made very seriously.
Is a hidden threat that is foreseen to happen or a secrete threat.
The probability of a threat is 1. The threat exists. What is important is not the threat but the probability that the threatened event happens.
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.
Cautious IS an adjective. An adjective is an action!
An adjective