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.
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.
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.
No, it is a verb or a noun (to go around, to surround; a round shape). The adjective form is circular.
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)
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".
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.
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]
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.
A WEAVING CONTEST was the contest between Aphrodite and Medusa.
his contest was in 2010
contest