No, it is not. Contest can be a verb (to compete or to challenge) or more commonly a noun (a competition). It can be a noun adjunct in terms such as contest rules.
The word 'open' is a verb, an adjective, and a noun.Verb: to make something accessible.Adjective: describes a noun as not closed.Noun: a contest or tournament that has no restrictions on who may compete; a wide or unobstructed space or expanse.Examples:The coffee shop will open at six AM. (verb)You'll find an open box of cereal in the cupboard. (adjective)They have a patio where we dine out in the open. (noun)
Eat is a verb.
No, it is a verb or a noun (to go around, to surround; a round shape). The adjective form is circular.
It can be used as a noun or a verb. Noun --- "We need someone to judge the contest." pronounced Con -test with accent on the first syllable. Verb --- "The family has decided to contest the will." pronounced Con -test with accent on the second syllable.
It could be any of these: first, second, or third. The three bases in baseball are numbered numerically, as are the finishing positions in a race or contest. Cousins can be first, second, or any ordinal number.
No. Fix is a noun (a repair, or slang for a problem situation, or the illegal manipulation of a contest), or a verb (to repair, or slang for illegally manipulating the result of a contest, or slang for neutering a pet). One adjective is "fixed."
No, it is a noun, although it can be used as an adjunct, as can poetry (poem collection, poem contest). The adjective, however, is "poetic" (and less commonly poetical).
You say, "I am going to a contest", this means you are going to watch a contest. "I am going for a contest", this is odd to say but means that you are hoping or choosing a contest. If you say "I am in/entering a contest", you are saying you are going to attend a contest.
No, the word contest is not an adverb.The word contest is a verb ("we will contest the decision") and a noun ("I entered the contest").
The word 'open' is a verb, an adjective, and a noun.Verb: to make something accessible.Adjective: describes a noun as not closed.Noun: a contest or tournament that has no restrictions on who may compete; a wide or unobstructed space or expanse.Examples:The coffee shop will open at six AM. (verb)You'll find an open box of cereal in the cupboard. (adjective)They have a patio where we dine out in the open. (noun)
it depends on which contest it is like if it is a drawing contest one has to win and if it is a spelling contest then it is a tie.
Yes, the word finally is an adverb. The adjective form is final.An example sentence using the word is "we have finally completed the construction of the teacup statue".
A sprint or a distance run, such as a marathon, are examples of a contest. ["Contest" as a noun] The defendants contest all of the plaintiff's allegations. ["Contest" as a verb]
A WEAVING CONTEST was the contest between Aphrodite and Medusa.
The word competition is a noun, a singular, common, abstract noun; a word for a test of skill or ability, a contest; a rival business striving toseverethe same customer base; a word for a competitor.
his contest was in 2010
contest