Deep is the adjective related to the word depth. A depth may be described as shallow or considerable.
The word "in-depth" is correctly spelled with a hyphen when used as an adjective, to mean through or detailed (e.g. an in-depth analysis).In its adverb use, it remains a two-word prepositional phrase, "in depth."
No, it is an adjective. It means relatively but not specifically great in depth. It can also mean engrossed, complex, or intellectually meaningful.
Deep.
It is never one word: there is no such English as "indepth." But you should definitely separate the words "in depth," or more commonly, put a hyphen between them: "in-depth analysis." This is probably more correct because "in-depth" is a compound adjective (this occurs when two words are put together with a hyphen to form an adjective; other examples are "well-deserved" and "long-awaited").
The noun form of the adjective "deep" is "depth." It refers to the measurement of how deep something is, or the quality of being deep in various contexts, such as physical depth in water or metaphorical depth in understanding or emotion.
No, "thin" is an adjective that describes the width or depth of something, such as a thin book or thin ice. An adverb modifies a verb, adjective, or another adverb to describe how, when, or where something happens.
The word depth has one syllable.
It is an adjective.It is a an adjective.
A word is a thing. The word 'word' is a noun.
The word beautiful is an adjective.
The word this is a demonstrative adjective.
no it is not an adjective