Yes, it can be, literally or metaphorically (square peg, a square meal, a square deal). The word square can also be a noun (various things of that shape) or a verb (to make square, or to multiply a number by itself).
It can be (squared blocks, squared integers). It is the past tense and past participle of the verb to square, and so can also be a verb form.
No. It is not an adjective. An adjective describes something.
You might be talking about cubism - art made with squares and squared shapes.
No it's not a adjective, an adjective is a describing word.
Yes, it is an adjective.
Yes, it is an adjective. it is the comparative form of the adjective 'scary.'
he made the theorem C squared = A squared + B squared and A squared = C squared - B squared or B squared = C squared - A squared
3x squared - x squared = 2x squared
The word square is an adjective, as well as a noun or verb.Geometric adjectives include quadratic.The verb to square has the past participle squared, which can be an adjective.
9x squared-15x squared = -6
2 squared X 3 squared = 5 squared
1 squared = 1 2 squared = 4 3 squared = 9 4 squared = 16 5 squared = 25 6 squared = 36 7 squared = 49 8 squared = 64 9 squared = 81 10 squared = 100
9 squared is 81 and 16 squared is 256
100cm squared = 0.01 metres squared
T squared is T times T. T squared and T squared appears to be the addition of T squared with itself. That answer would be 2T squared or 2T^2
104
1 squared plus 8 squared or 4 squared plus 7 squared
144 squared x 36 squared is equal to 26,873,856.