participle
Wet can be used as an adjective. It can also be used as a verb to describe an action.
Keep is a verb, but can be used as an adjective as 'keepable'
No, the word can is a noun, and the homonym is a verb (to put in cans) or a modal verb (able to). The adjective form of the noun or verb can is "canned." The word can is called a "noun adjunct" when it is used with another noun, as in "can opener."
its usually used as a verb not and adjective.
A verb can modify a noun by indicating it is doing something: "running man"
Wet can be used as an adjective. It can also be used as a verb to describe an action.
An adjective derived from a verb is still called an adjective, i.e. The shining light (from the verb to shine) The battered man (from the verb to batter) Her crushed dreams (from the verb to crush)
Keep is a verb, but can be used as an adjective as 'keepable'
No, the word can is a noun, and the homonym is a verb (to put in cans) or a modal verb (able to). The adjective form of the noun or verb can is "canned." The word can is called a "noun adjunct" when it is used with another noun, as in "can opener."
The verb is were.The verb 'were' is a form of the verb 'to be'.The verb 'were' is functioning as a linking verb in this sentence. The object of the verb (suspicious) restates the subject (Trojans).A noun or an adjective that follows a linking verb is called a subject complement.An adjective functioning as a subject complement is called a predicate adjective. The word 'suspicious' is a predicate adjective.
NO
No, it is a noun or a verb. The verb's past participle, flowered, can be used as an adjective.
its usually used as a verb not and adjective.
The term "few" can be used as an adjective or a noun. It is not a verb.
Large is an adjective, while enlarge is a verb. An adjective because it describes a noun.
terrifying is not a verb.... it is an adjective. to terrify someone is a verb and that is used instead of the adjective. happy to help
It is a verb because a verb is an action and destroying is an action. The past participle of the verb (destroyed) is used as an adjective.