No, it is not. To grow is a verb. However, the past participle grown is used as an adjective.
Yes, blooming can be used as an adjective. The blooming flowers look beautiful.
Answer:It depends if it is an adjective which is future tense if your entire body is growing. It is an adjective which is present tense if a stomach is growing because you're eating too much. Answer:Wrong. The answer is no.
The present participle "flourishing" can be used as an adjective (in the process of flourishing), for either of the main meanings (to grow, prosper, or to wave, display ostentatiously).The past participle "flourished" is only used as an adjective for the second meaning (e.g. a flourished ace, a flourished weapon).* The derivative adjective flourishable sees virtually no modern use.
humid glassThey describe the noun enclosures
No, it is a verb or a noun (to go around, to surround; a round shape). The adjective form is circular.
The adjective in that sentence is, that.
no
The adverb that modifies an adjective in the sentence is very (small, an adjective).The other adverbs in the sentence are really (grow, a verb) and too (quickly, an adverb).
Yes, blooming can be used as an adjective. The blooming flowers look beautiful.
No. Mushroom is a noun, or a verb (to rapidly grow or to billow).
Rich
Grown is the past participle of the verb to grow. It can be used as an adjective meaning something that is increased. Example: A grown man.
No, the word growing is not an adverb. Growing is an adjective and a verb.The adverb form of the word growing is growingly.
An adjective alone can follow a linking verb (such as appear, be, become, feel, grow, or seem ) when the adjective describes the subject, e.g. He seems stupid. An adjective which modifies a following noun may follow an ordinary transitive verb, e.g. He reads stupid magazines.
Answer:It depends if it is an adjective which is future tense if your entire body is growing. It is an adjective which is present tense if a stomach is growing because you're eating too much. Answer:Wrong. The answer is no.
The present participle "flourishing" can be used as an adjective (in the process of flourishing), for either of the main meanings (to grow, prosper, or to wave, display ostentatiously).The past participle "flourished" is only used as an adjective for the second meaning (e.g. a flourished ace, a flourished weapon).* The derivative adjective flourishable sees virtually no modern use.
The word growing is a verb. It is the present participle of the verb grow.