No, but edgy is. Like avant gard, or reckless.
It depends on how the word is used.
Please see the examples below:
We walked near the edge of the cliff. (edge = noun)
He needed one more edge piece to complete the puzzle. (edge = adjective)
He tried to edge out his opponent. (edge = verb)
She's on the edge of a nervous breakdown. (noun)
Noun: Standing on the edge Adjective: The edge of the blade Me thinks.
When "cutting edge" is used as a noun, it is not hyphenated. "The cutting edge of the knife is sharp." When it is used as an adjective, it is hyphenated. "The cutting-edge technology impressed the engineers." Two-word adjectives are hyphenated.
It can be (trailing edge, trailing veil). It is the past tense and past participle of the verb (to trail, meaning to stream or follow behind).
it depends on how you use it. if you write "The President leads the country" it is a verb. but if you use it to describe something, it would be an adjective like in the sentence "Can you hand me the lead pencil?" what pencil? The lead pencil. it can also be a noun like "Lead is heavy."Therefore, lead can be an verb, adjective, or noun.
No, it is a verb or a noun (to go around, to surround; a round shape). The adjective form is circular.
Noun: Standing on the edge Adjective: The edge of the blade Me thinks.
When "cutting edge" is used as a noun, it is not hyphenated. "The cutting edge of the knife is sharp." When it is used as an adjective, it is hyphenated. "The cutting-edge technology impressed the engineers." Two-word adjectives are hyphenated.
No the word jagged is not a noun. It is an adjective and a past tense verb.
There are 2 separate meanings to the word marginal. When using it as an adjective it means to be situated at the edge of something. When using it as a noun it means that a plant is growing in water next to the edge of the land.
Yes, it is. It means having an uneven edge. Where it suggests serrated, it has a connotation of sharp.
Yes, the word shooting can be an adjective and a verb, it is also a verbal noun (gerund). Examples: Adjective: We have shooting practice after school today. Verb: We're shooting for the best grade average in the county. Noun: The shooting last night has everyone on edge.
The answer would depend on a semicircular WHAT. Semicircular is an adjective, there is no noun to go with it.The answer would depend on a semicircular WHAT. Semicircular is an adjective, there is no noun to go with it.The answer would depend on a semicircular WHAT. Semicircular is an adjective, there is no noun to go with it.The answer would depend on a semicircular WHAT. Semicircular is an adjective, there is no noun to go with it.
It can be (trailing edge, trailing veil). It is the past tense and past participle of the verb (to trail, meaning to stream or follow behind).
You look so good in red. (noun)The red uniforms are very distinguished. (adjective)
Can be a noun, as in a straight line or a straight part (like a racecourse) or in an informal way, a person is free from drugs
it depends on how you use it. if you write "The President leads the country" it is a verb. but if you use it to describe something, it would be an adjective like in the sentence "Can you hand me the lead pencil?" what pencil? The lead pencil. it can also be a noun like "Lead is heavy."Therefore, lead can be an verb, adjective, or noun.
The Latin adjective bipennis means "two-edged". As a feminine noun (short for securis bipennis) it means "a two-edged axe".