An answer, but only after you answer a question: Is English the second language of the person who wrote this question?
No. The word compel is a verb, and does not use the suffix -ful (makes adjectives from nouns). The adjectives related to the verb compel are the predicates: compelling and compelled.
The adjectives are the present and past participle, manufacturing and manufactured. Related derivative adjectives are manufacturable and the rarely-seen manufactural.
No. Nurse (to suckle) is a verb, and the noun can mean a medical nurse. The participles of the verb can form related adjectives (nursing, nursed).
In this case "vine" isn't apart of "climbing" which is a verb. Typically, nouns can't create compound verbs or adjectives.
"Knocked" is neither an adverb nor an adjective; it is the past tense of the verb "knock." Adverbs modify verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs, while adjectives describe nouns. In a sentence, "knocked" functions as a verb, indicating the action of striking something.
Verb
No. Can is a helping verb
An adjective
The abstract noun forms of the verb to submit are submission, submittal, and the gerund, submitting.Note:The nouns 'submission' and 'submittal' are abstract nouns as words for the act or the process of submitting.The nouns 'submission' and 'submittal' are concrete nouns as word for a thing submitted.
Predicate adjectives.
Quiver is a verb. Therefore, it has no adjectives.
adjectives
beutiful is, but enjoy is a verb. beutiful is, but enjoy is a verb.
Said is a verb. Adjectives describe nouns. Adverbs modify verbs, adjectives, and other adverbs.
No. The word compel is a verb, and does not use the suffix -ful (makes adjectives from nouns). The adjectives related to the verb compel are the predicates: compelling and compelled.
The word trust is both a noun and a verb. The present participle, trusting, and the past participle, trusted, of the verb are both adjectives. Other adjectives are trustability, trustworthy, and trusty.
No, it's a verb. To have, having, etc.