The word "stress" can be changed to an adjective by using "stressful." This form describes something that causes stress or is characterized by stress. For example, one might describe a demanding job as a "stressful environment." Another related adjective is "stressed," which refers to a state of being under stress.
The noun 'stress' is a singular, common noun, a word for a thing.The noun 'stress' is a concrete noun as a word for a measurable pressure or tension exerted on an object.The noun 'stress' is an abstract noun as a word for a state of mental or emotional strain or tension.The word 'stress' is also a verb: stress, stresses, stressing, stressed.
tendency
ing
As far as I know the adjective is nucleo- and is used in combination form i.e. nucleoplasm, nucleoprotein.
Busy is the adjective form. Example use:You must wait for the light to change, this is a busyintersection.
Stressful, as in this is a stressful test.
It can be (stressed individuals, stressed vowels). Stressed is the past participle of the verb (to stress).
Norway is a proper noun, not an adjective. It is the name of a country. It does not change.
The stress in the word "adjective" is placed on the second syllable: ad-JEC-tive. This means that the "JEC" part is pronounced with greater emphasis compared to the other syllables.
The adjective form is enigmatic.
To change "recent" into an adjective, you can add the suffix "-ly" to make it "recently."
You can change "affection" into an adjective by adding the suffix "-ate," resulting in "affectionate."
You can change the adjective "arrogant" into a noun by adding the suffix "-ce" to form the noun "arrogance."
Stressed is a verb (past tense of stress) and an adjective (stressed syllable).
Leisure is already in its adjective form. It does not change between noun and adjective, only between noun/adjective and adverb. "Please complete this at your leisure." = noun "My favorite leisure activity is golf." = adjective "He completed the task leisurely." = adverb
fame
Occasional