Yes it is. It can be used as an adjective to describe something, e.g. The dead dog is lying on the side of the road. The noun form "death" is also often used as an adjunct (death mask, death bringer).
brown dead
The verb of the adjective dying is die.
The adjective dead has the related abstract noun "death" (in some uses, deadness, meaning desensitivity).
As an adjective; dead, departed. As a noun; decedent.
Yes, the word dead is a noun used for things like 'the dead of night', 'the dead of winter', or 'prayers for the dead'. The noun form for the adjective dead is deadness; a more commonly used noun is death.
Dead is an adjective.
Any word for a body would be a noun. And adjective for dead is deceased.
dead
No< it is not. It is an adjective.
Dead
dead
The word dead is an adjective (dead, deader, deadest), a noun (an uncountable noun), and an adverb. Examples:Adjective: The dead man was identified quickly.Noun: They arrived in the dead of the night.Adverb: He was stopped dead in his tracks.
Adjective would be Dead. this is an Q/A site not a ; "lets find the adjective site coz we havent got lives" :@
Any word for a body would be a noun. And adjective for dead is deceased.
brown dead
"salty"
"Dead" isn't a verb, so it doesn't have a tense."Dead" can be used as an adjective: dead flowers, a dead sleep.It can be used as an adverb: I am dead serious.As a noun: remembering the dead.