its a plural noun
An adjective is a word that describes the noun, therefore gymnastics is a noun but gymnastic is an adjective.
Its a noun. The adjective of difference is different
It is both a noun and an adjective. It normally is used as a noun though.
No, it is a noun. It is the noun form of the adjective weak.
It is a noun (an area). The adjective is regional.
Yes, the noun favorite is a common noun. The word favorite is also an adjective. Example: The favorite won the race. (noun) The favorite horse won the race. (adjective)
Win is a verb and a noun but not an adjective. Verb: Bob's team won the game. Noun: They needed the win.
Examples of adjectives that are formed from a noun are:air (noun) - airy (adjective)artist (noun) - artistic (adjective)beauty (noun) - beautiful (adjective)blood (noun) - bloody (adjective)fish (noun) - fishy (adjective)hope (noun) - hopeful (adjective)length (noun) - lengthy (adjective)memory (noun) - memorable (adjective)politics (noun) - political (adjective)thought (noun) - thoughtful (adjective)use (noun) - useful (adjective)water (noun) - watery (adjective)
No, it is a verb or a noun (to go around, to surround; a round shape). The adjective form is circular.
The word 'Buddhistic' is the adjective form of the noun Buddhism.The adjective 'Buddhistic' is a proper adjective; the noun 'Buddhism' is a proer noun. A proper adjective and a proper noun are always capitalized.
The word 'fair' is a noun, an adjective, and an adverb (but not a pronoun).Examples:My lamb won a ribbon at the fair. (noun)They made a fair decision. (adjective)We always play fair. (adverb)
it is a noun and an adjective
The word 'grand' functions as a noun and an adjective in a sentence.The noun 'grand' functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.The adjective 'grand' is used to describe a noun.The noun and the adjective both function as a subject complement, a word following a linking verb that restates the subject of the sentence..Example uses:The baby grand gave the room an elegant aire. (noun, subject of the sentence.I won two grand at the casino! (noun, direct object of the verb 'won')I bought the lovely piano with the two grand that I won. (noun, object of the preposition 'with')A grand staircase rose to the throne. (adjective, describes the noun 'staircase')The hotel had a large, grand lobby. (adjective, describe the noun 'lobby')The piano that she plays is a grand. (noun, subject complement, piano=grand)The view from the cliff was very grand. (adjective, subject complement, view=grand)Note:A noun functioning as a subject complement is called a predicate nominative.An adjective functioning as a subject complement is called a predicate adjective.
Night: noun an: adverb adjective: adjective noun: noun adverb: adverb
It is not a noun. The word awarded is the past participle of the verb to award; the past participle of a verb is also an adjective.
Creativity is a noun.
Adjective and noun