yes
gloomy, forboding, enchanting, sprawling, 'with spires sticking towards the sky like fingers from a giant stone hand attempting to grasp the heavens'... have fun with it
The comparative form of gloomy is gloomier, the superlative form is gloomiest.
pensive
Room 13 by robert swindells
I am unsure of the answer of the question.
No, gloomy is an adjective. What a gloomy day.
The word "gloomy" is an adjective.
Despairing Hopeless gloomy
No. Gloomy is an adjective. Gloom is an abstract noun.
gloomy
The word dreary is an adjective. It means gloomy, dull, or sorrowful. There is a rarely seen related adjective, drearisome.
Moodiness is the abstract noun form for the adjective moody. Another abstract noun is mood.
dark, dull, dim, dismal, blac, grey, murky, dreary, miserable, glum, dispirited
"Dismal" is an adjective. It is used to describe something that is depressing, gloomy, or bleak.
No, gloomy is an adjective. What a gloomy day.
Gloomy, dreary, electrifying, sorrowful, tearful, dark, stunning, raging, destructive, cold, loud.
An adjective is any word that describes a noun. Big, small, red, blue, they're all adjectives. So are words like gloomy, as in the gloomy cloud, or beautiful, as in the beautiful roses, but only in certain circumstances.By contrast, an adverb is a word that describes a verb: she swam quickly. The pair danced enthusiastically. Adverbs almost always end in -ly.