Yes, humid is an adjective. Anything describing something or someone is an adjective. Example: This place is HUMID.
Humid is an adjective.
In sentences such as "Don't touch the hot stove" or "That wire is hot to the touch" the word hot is the adjective. The word touch is a noun in either case - although in the second, it is the object of the adjective prepositional phrase.
When the air is humid and the glass is cold.
Hot and humid according to the location.
Yes. It is much more humid. If it were not, the Florida would be a desert.
The noun forms of the adjective 'humid' are humidity and humidness.
Humid is an adjective.
The noun form for the adjective humid is humidity.
No, the word 'humid' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun (for example, a humid day or humid weather).The noun forms of the adjective 'humid' are humidness and humidity, which are both concrete nouns as a word for a physical amount of water or vapor in the air.
Noun forms of the adjective 'humid' are humidness and humidity.
Humid is an adjective that describes a high volume of water vapour in the atmosphere.
Yes, it is. It is the superlative form of the adjective "damp" (slightly wet, or humid).
humid glassThey describe the noun enclosures
The noun form for the adjective humid is humidity (add -ity).Some dictionaries also accept humidness (add -ness).
anhydrous is an adjective usually used to describe the properties of certain salts in that they tend to absorb water directly from sufficiently humid air.
No, the word 'humid' is an adjective, a word that describes a noun as characterized by a high amount of water or water vapor; for example a humid day. The noun form 'humidity' is a concrete noun; high humidity can be felt physically, any humidity can be measured by instruments.
If you mean havilah (הבילה), it is the feminine form of the adjective meaning "muggy" or "humid".If you mean khavilah (חבילה), it means "package" or "parcel".