The present participle and the past participle of most verbs are also adjectives. For examples:
The trampled grass will have to be reseeded. (trampled is the past participle of the verb to trample)
My mother has signed me up for dancing lessons. (dancing is the present participle of the verb to dance)
That abandoned building is finally being torn down. (abandoned is the past participle of the verb to abandon)
Dad showed me his secret fishing hole. (fishing is the present participle of the verb to fish)
Gerunds are forms of the verb that function as nouns. They always end in "ing."Participles are forms of the verb that function as adjectives. They can end in "ed," "en," or "ing."Infinitives are forms of the verb that may acts as adjectives, adverbs or nouns. They include "to" plus the base form of the verb, as in "to run."
Gerunds are forms of the verb that function as nouns. They always end in "ing."Participles are forms of the verb that function as adjectives. They can end in "ed," "en," or "ing."Infinitives are forms of the verb that may acts as adjectives, adverbs or nouns. They include "to" plus the base form of the verb, as in "to run."
The verb to magnify forms adjectives from its present and past participles. These are magnifying and magnified.
The derivative adjectives are introductive and introducible. The present and past participles of the verb to introduce may be used as adjectives. They are introducing and introduced.
Adjectives and adverbs have comparative forms. Nouns and verbs do not. Pool may be a noun or a verb.
blue and sale.And if you want adjectives, the principal verb should be are, not is.
The three kinds of verbals are gerunds, participles, and infinitives. Gerunds are verb forms ending in "-ing" that function as nouns, such as "running." Participles are verb forms that typically end in "-ing" or "-ed," serving as adjectives, like "baked" in "baked goods." Infinitives are the base form of a verb preceded by "to," such as "to swim," and can function as nouns, adjectives, or adverbs.
Verb
No, snaked is a past tense verb and past participle. The words snaked, snaking and snakish can be adjectives, but there are no adverb forms.
No. To question is a verb, and a question is a noun. The forms questioned or questionable are adjectives.
No. Can is a helping verb
Comparative and superlative degrees are for adjectives and adverbs. House can be used as a noun or a verb and does not have comparative or superlative forms.