No. Men is a plural noun. The possessive form men's is an adjective.
a men who is strong
Men can be overbearing. The adjective begins with the letter O.
true'All
Adjective
The possessive pronoun is their, they (the men) had a voyage.The form is a possessive adjective that describes the noun voyage.
No, it is an incorrectly punctuated plural possessive adjective. "The mens' restroom was full."
Because sexist is an adjective, not a noun, it cannot have a plural. You can have sexist men or sexist women.
adjective
Menta gentile/romana/verde are Italian equivalents of the English word "spearmint".Specifically, the feminine noun menta is "mint". The feminine/masculine adjective gentile literally means "gentle, kind". The feminine adjective romana means "Roman". The feminine/masculine adjective verde translates as "green".The pronunciation will be "MEN-ta djen-TEE-ley", "MEN-ta ro-MA-na", and "MEN-ta VER-dey" in Italian.
The adverb profusely could describe sweating (action). The adjective sweating (e.g. sweating men) has no adverb form, but the adjective "sweaty" has the rarely-used adverb form "sweatily."
If it is used with objects, yes. Otherwise it is just a number. "Five hundred thousand men were in the Athenian army."
The word all can be a pronoun, noun, adverb, or adjective. When it modifies a noun, it means "every" or "every one" of the forms of that noun. Example: all men are created equal (every man is created equal)