The adjective petty (for an amount) has the synonyms small, trivial, insignificant, or inconsequential.
When applied to a person, it has the synonyms low, shallow, childish, niggling, or comtemptible (these obviously all have different connotations).
Petty comes from the French 'petit', meaning small. In English it is used in the sense of small-minded, fussy, unnecessary, unimportant.
Yes, it is. It can refer to people (narrow-minded, trifling) or things (unimportant, trivial).
small or insignificant
Petty is an adjective.
The part of speech that the word my is used as is an adjective.
A suffix changes a word's part of speech. For example, the word 'happy' is an adjective. But when you add a suffix, which is an ending, it can change the part of speech. Happily is an adverb. Happiness is a noun.
for
it depends what word it is it could be any part of speech depending on the sentence
The word power is a noun. The plural form is powers.
The word petty is an adjective. It describes something that is of little importance. For example, if you could not find a paper clip, that would be a petty loss.
The part of speech for this particular word is a noun.
The part of speech that the word my is used as is an adjective.
H is a letter, not a word. To be a part of speech, it needs to be a word.
The part of speech for the word civilian is English grammar.
The part of speech for the word diplomacy is a noun.
The word speech is a noun.
The word pilfered is a verb. It is the past tense of pilfer.
The part of speech for this particular word is a noun.
The word speech is a noun.
The word speech is a noun.
The word speech is a noun.