substantial
"Drug" is a noun, not an adjective or adverb. It refers to a substance that has physiological effects when ingested into the body.
Liquid can be a noun and an adjective. Noun: A flowing substance. Adjective: Flowing freely like water.
The adjective in the sentence is "dangerous." It describes the potential harm or risk posed by leaving a poisonous substance unmarked on the shelf.
No, it is a noun. It refers to the essential nature or the composition of something. It can also refer to whether something has specifics and practicality (His argument has no substance, so it's hard to take him seriously); and it is sometimes a synonym for drugs, as in "substance abuse" (where it is used as a noun adjunct). The adjective forms are "substantial" and substantive.
No, "evaporate" is a verb used to describe the action of a substance turning into vapor or gas.
Yes, slimy is an adjective. It refers to something that is slippery, greasy, or covered in a sticky substance.
"Drug" is a noun, not an adjective or adverb. It refers to a substance that has physiological effects when ingested into the body.
The word adhesive can be an adjective and a noun. The adjective form means to be sticky. The noun form is a substance that provides adhesion (such as glue).
Liquid can be a noun and an adjective. Noun: A flowing substance. Adjective: Flowing freely like water.
The adjective in the sentence is "dangerous." It describes the potential harm or risk posed by leaving a poisonous substance unmarked on the shelf.
The word immaterial is an adjective. It means having no substance or irrelevant.
No, it is a noun. It refers to the essential nature or the composition of something. It can also refer to whether something has specifics and practicality (His argument has no substance, so it's hard to take him seriously); and it is sometimes a synonym for drugs, as in "substance abuse" (where it is used as a noun adjunct). The adjective forms are "substantial" and substantive.
No, "evaporate" is a verb used to describe the action of a substance turning into vapor or gas.
The word solvent is both a noun and an adjective. Example uses: Noun: This solvent will remove the stains from your driveway. Adjective: You need a solvent cleaner to remove grease and oil stains. Adjective: That is a good investment, they are a solvent company.
Sticky is an adjective
Yes, it is. It means "providing nutrition" and is often synonymous with the adjectives nutritious or nutritive.The adjective nutrient has become widely used as a noun to mean a component of nutrition, a nutritive substance.
The word "Polish" (capitalized) is a proper adjective referring to something or someone from Poland. The word polish can be a verb (to clean, smooth, or shine) or a noun (a substance used to polish). The adjective would be polished or polishing.