That is the correct spelling of the word "elegance" (style, luxury, grandeur).
Elegant is an adjective, a word that describes a noun; for example an elegant restaurant, an elegant outfit.
No, the word "elegant" is not an adverb. The word "elegant" is an adjective.The adverb form of the word "elegant" is elegantly.
refined and tasteful in appearance or behavior or style; "elegant handwriting"; "an elegant dark suit"; "she was elegant to her fingertips"; "small churches with elegant white spires"; "an elegant mathematical solution--simple and precise and lucid"
The abstract noun form for the adjective elegant is elegance.
The word "elegant" is not a verb, but an adjective. Adjectives are words that describe nouns and verbs. A woman, a party, or the movement of dance may all be described as elegant.
The correct spelling is elegant (fancy, lavish).
The correct spelling of the word is exquisite (fine, elegant).
The correct spelling is elegant (splendid, luxurious).
The correct spelling of the word has the -ous adjective form, luxurious (fancy, elegant).
The way you have it spelled in the question was correct, "elegant".
élégant. It's pretty much said the same. Just say it more....elegantly.
Elegant is an adjective, a word that describes a noun; for example an elegant restaurant, an elegant outfit.
No, the word "elegant" is not an adverb. The word "elegant" is an adjective.The adverb form of the word "elegant" is elegantly.
This is a yugioh card...sorry to disappoint but harpy ladies don't exist in Pokemon and indeed have no spell support.
elegant
In Pokémon, "Elegant Egotist" and "Double Team" are not the same move. "Double Team" is a status move that increases the user's evasion by creating illusory copies of the user, making it harder for opponents to hit. "Elegant Egotist," on the other hand, is a signature move of the Pokémon Zoroark, which has different effects and is not widely recognized in competitive play.
Elegant and arrogant does