An adjective modifies a noun, pronoun, or noun form. It provides additional information about the word it modifies. The word ball is not a precise description, especially since the word ball has multiple meanings. However, a large blue ball provides a much better description of the object.
It can be used as an adjective: a plum job
The adjective form is educated. Example sentence: An educated person can get a better job than an uneducated person.
No, the word 'new' is an adjective, a word that describes a noun (new shoes, a new job, etc.)The noun form of the adjective 'new' is newness.no
The word "hard" can be either an adjective or an adverb. E.g. Concrete is hard. It was a hard test. (adjective) He works hard at his job. Push hard on the button. (adverb)
The pronoun for 'his job' is 'it'. The pronoun in'his job' is 'his', a possessive adjective. Example sentence:His job is very hard but it is also important to him. (the pronoun 'it' takes the place of 'his job' in the second part of the sentnece)
No, happier is an adjective; the comparative form for the adjective happy.positive: happycomparative: happiersuperlative: happiestAn adjective is a word that describes a noun: Thanks to his new job, Herbert is a happier man.The noun form for the adjective happy is happiness.
The word nothing is normally a pronoun, or a noun, but it can rarely be used as an adjective. An example would be a "nothing job" or a "nothing role" -- whether this is an actual adjective or a noun adjunct is subject to interpretation.
Both the noun form and the adjective are merchant, an alternate adjective is mercantile. Example uses:As a noun: The new merchant on the block is a used book seller.As an adjective: His new job is on a merchant ship; no tips but no angry passengers.Alternate adjective: They run a wholesale business with a mercantile shop attached.
The meaning of the word is an adjective. It is complementing the man on how well he did his job.
Appraisers rates employees on a number of job related factors
There is a B sound in the adjective admirable (worthy of admiration or praise).
Difficult - this is not a verb just an adverb (describing the verb to be). You can say for example 'I have a difficult job'