Combined adjective may be another term for adjective forms in foreign languages.
The closest forms in English are hyphenated adjectives (blue-green, foreign-born).
This term might also describe the conflation of adjectives, as in combining fantastic and fabulous to make the slang term "fantabulous."
You likely mean "conjunctive adverb." This is an adverb that connects two independent clauses. These adverbs show cause and effect, sequence, contrast, comparison, or other relationships.
No, it is an adjective (having characteristics of a deer). Practically all words formed using -like as a suffix or combined word are adjectives.
As a prepositional phrase, it can be either, but more properly an adverb phrase. He studied the digestive process in dogs. (adjective, meaning of dogs) The disease is often found in dogs. (adverb)
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.
Combine is a verb, but combined can be an adjective in some situations.
As a combined form, it is an adjective phrase. Highly is an adverb that modifies the adjective skilled.
Yes, combined is a verb, the past tense of combine. It is also an adjective.
Neither word is an adjective. They are both adverbs, combined to form a question that asks about frequency (answered by adverbs of frequency).
No, it is an adjective. It is a form of the verb to combine, meaning to mix or ally together.
No, it is a contracted form of the phrase 'it was' ('twas). It functions as a pronoun and linking verb combined.
These are words combined as if they were separate, for example, Blackberry is an adjective followed by a noun. This is a syntactic compund
No, it is not. It is the present participle of the verb to carry. It can be a verb, or adjective, or noun. A contraction is a combined word form that uses an apostrophe.
Because it is a compound adjective used to modify a noun. You're indicating that "the component words have a combined meaning."
Nouns that are combined in the same order as they would be if they were separate words. For example 'blackberry' is an adjective followed by a noun. This is a syntactic compound
The word 'humble' is an adjective and a verb. Example sentence for the verb:The combined knowledge of contributors on this site will humble you.The noun form for the adjective humble is humbleness. Another noun form is humility.
Yes, it can be a noun or an adjective. The noun is the shellfish or the color associated with its shell. The adjective can mean made from, like, or having the appearance of pearl; or pearl-colored. Other adjectives are pearllike (pearl-like) or pearlish.