The adjective form of fragrance is "fragrant."
The adjective form is concentrative, more concentrative, most concentrative; another adjective form is the past participle of the verb to concentrate, concentrated.
The adjective form of "reaction" is "reactive."
The adjective form of "purify" is "pure."
Yes, it can be. Scented is the past tense and past participle of the verb to scent, and the adjective means having a scent or smell. Examples: scented oil, scented soap.
The adjective form of "acid" is "acidic."
The noun form for the adjective fragrant is fragrantness.A related noun form is fragrance.
The noun form for the adjective fragrant is fragrantness.A related noun form is fragrance.
There is no abstract noun form of the adjective 'fragrant'. The noun form of the adjective is 'fragrantness', a concrete noun as a word for a physical quality or attribute. The related noun 'fragrance' is also a concrete noun as a word for a physical thing.
Let's just say that fragrance is a french word...
The adjective "perfumed" is a synonym for the adjective "fragrant," and the noun "perfume" is a synonym for the noun "fragrance."
No. Fragrance as a smell or odor is a noun, as is a liquid that provides it.The related adjective is fragrant.
The adjective form of concept is conceptual.The adjective form of conception is conceptional.
No, the word 'fragrant' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun.The related noun form is fragrance, a concrete noun; a word for a physical thing that can be experienced by the sense of smell.
The adjective form is cranial.
The adjective form for the pronoun they is their.
The Adjective form of Pathologist is Pathological.
The adjective form of concept is conceptual.The adjective form of conception is conceptional.