The adjective is taken (occupied, reserved, refers to the seat). Although taken is a verb form, it is the past participle and the verb "is taken" does not apply here (as it would for 'The train will be taken more often than the bus'). We are not taking the seat anywhere.
No, it is not. The word seat may be a transitive verb (to sit a person or persons) or a noun (a sitting place, or a place or position of authority). It appears as a noun adjunct in terms such as seat cushion.
It can be, in the sense of someone battered, hurt, or hit (e.g. the struck pedestrian was taken to the hospital). This is usually different from the other participle, stricken, also used as an adjective.
ther is a split or some pin that is in the front that is a stopper so the seat cant go all the way to the back as soon you have taken that out you can push the seat all the way to the back and it goes out of the slay and ther you go the seat is not in place any longer so you can remove it if you like
You can watch it here both the one that was taken off from youtube and the uncensored one that was never on youtube. erykahbaduuncensoredvideo.blogspot.com/
No. It is not an adjective. An adjective describes something.
It can be (e.g. the path taken, the seat is taken). It is also the past participle of "to take" and can be part of some tenses (I have taken, they had taken, it will be taken).
Take is the past participle of the verb, to take. As such it can be used as an adjective. It has also come to used as an adjective in itself.Examples: This seat is takenShe was quite taken with her new tennis teacher.
If the seat is taken then you can't select it.
no it is not
The seat for an honest public official.
No, the word 'taken' is the past participle of the verb to take. The past participle is also an adjective. Examples: Verb: I have already taken that course. Adjective: The victims had no proof of their taken property.
No, it is a noun. It means a short padded footstool or seat.
Some safety concerns that have to be taken into account when buying a child seat include selecting the appropriate seat heat, ensuring that the child seat fits the vehicle, and also the type of material used to manufacturer the child seat.
Potty Talk Presents--- Is This Seat Taken - 2013 was released on: USA: September 2013
In that sentence, "Arctic" is the proper adjective.
You say "Is this seat taken?" in Yoruba language of the Western African origin as "Se wan ti gba aye yi ni?".
No, it is not. The word seat may be a transitive verb (to sit a person or persons) or a noun (a sitting place, or a place or position of authority). It appears as a noun adjunct in terms such as seat cushion.