No, determine is a verb. The verb form "determined" can be an adjective, meaning resolute. The form determining can also be used as an adjective.
Yes.
The adjective forms for the verb to determine are the present participle, determining, and the past participle, determined. Examples:The determining factor will be the cost.The determined cause of the accident is that your were traveling too close to the car in front of you.
The word 'determined' is the past participle of the verb to determine. The past participle of the verb is also an adjective, for example a determined effort.The noun forms for the verb to determine are determiner, determination and the gerund, determining.The noun form for the adjective determined is determinedness.
The general adjective relating to ducks ('ducklike') is "anatine". Beyond that, if you want to describe the qualities of a particular ducjk then surely you can use whatever adjective(s) take your fancy.
The word determined is the past participle, past tense of the verb to determine. The forms of the verb are: determine, determines, determining, determined.The past participle, determined, also functions as an adjective: a determined effort.The present participle, determining, also functions as an adjective: the determining factor.The noun forms for the verb to determine are determiner, determination, and the gerund, determining.
The adjective determined means devoted or dedicated to a cause or activity.(e.g. He was determined to succeed. / They were fighting a determined enemy.)The past tense determined (verb "to determine") can mean:* discovered by experiment or analysis(e.g. They determined the cause of the spill.)* had been set, established, or fixed(e.g. Production was determined by the demand.)
Determined. She is a determined worker.
determined
The noun determination is related to the verb "to determine." The past participle "determined" can be used as an adjective. Both determined and determination can have the connotation of tenaciousness or steadfastness (e.g. determined to succeed).
Yes, it can, to mean tenacious or steadfast (a determined investigator).Determined is the past tense and past participle of the verb "to determine" but as an adjective usually has the same connotation as seen in the noun determination (will).
ducks are determined so i have to say determined
No. It is a form of the verb to dodge.(The similar word dogged is an adjective, meaning determined.)
The adjective forms for the verb to determine are the present participle, determining, and the past participle, determined. Examples:The determining factor will be the cost.The determined cause of the accident is that your were traveling too close to the car in front of you.
The word 'determined' is the past participle of the verb to determine. The past participle of the verb is also an adjective, for example a determined effort.The noun forms for the verb to determine are determiner, determination and the gerund, determining.The noun form for the adjective determined is determinedness.
No, determination is a noun. The adverb is determinedly.
Determined
The word "preordained" is a verb. It means to determine or decide something in advance, usually by a higher power or authority.
Yes, it is. It means difficult, determined not to give up or give in.