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
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."
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.
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)