No. It is not an adjective. An adjective describes something.
Yes, it is an adjective.
No it's not a adjective, an adjective is a describing word.
Yes, it is an adjective. it is the comparative form of the adjective 'scary.'
Because "tremblor" isn't a word. You might be thinking of "trembler". "Trembling" is "tremblor" in Spanish. We use the Spanish word as a technical word for earthquakes. I'm adding a "duh" correction. This answer doesn't make sense. What should have been said is "trembling is TEMBLOR in spanish. Otherwise this is meaningless
trembling
tremblant, if used as an adjective or gerundive And "tremblement" if used as a noun. Please, be precise when you ask for a translation.
Tremble is an action, and therefore a verb. E.g. 'I felt the Earth tremble as the teacher's anger rose, and steam burst forth from his ears.' You can use a form of the word 'tremble' to describe something, e.g. 'The trembling student, not knowing the difference between a verb and an adjective, cowered in the corner whilst awaiting his teacher's wrath.' Here, trembling is still a verb, but because it describes the nature of the student, it also acts as an adjective, so it is called an adverb.
One sentence with the word "trembling" is; The little girl was trembling at the sight of the clown.
The correct spelling is "trembling" (to shake).
Trembling Earth died in 1837.
Nightly Trembling was created in 1999.
The mouse was trembling with fear when the cat trapped him in a corner.
Steady or stabilize. Those words are the opposite of trembling.
No, the noun 'trembling' (a gerund) is a concrete noun, a word for a physical condition.
leaf?
Trembling Before G-d was created in 2001.