The word must can be used as a verb and a noun, but not as an adjective.
It must be an adjective.
The plural form for the noun must is musts. The word must is also a verb, an auxiliary verb, and an adjective.
well for adjectives it must be a describing clause and for verb it must be a doing clause and for a adverb it must be a modifying clause
"Good" can be either a noun or an adjective: Example as noun: We must all work for the greater good. Example as adjective: she is a very good girl.
I think it's an adjective.. to be a noun it has to be 'sun' or 'sunniness' To be a noun, it must be a person, a place, or an object. Since sunny usually describes a noun, that makes it an adjective. It would be a noun if it were a person's name.
No, unlike can only be used as an adjective. It can only be an adjective because it must always be preceded by a linking verb (is, am, are, was, were, seems, etc.). A linking verb must connect (or link) the subject to an adjective.
Busy is the adjective form. Example use:You must wait for the light to change, this is a busyintersection.
caring passionate
Busy is the adjective form. Example use:You must wait for the light to change, this is a busyintersection.
It must be an adjective.
present A doctor must be present at the boxing match.
The adjective and noun agreement rule in Latin requires that a noun and any adjective that modifies must agree in gender, number, and case (but not necessarily ending).
The plural form for the noun must is musts. The word must is also a verb, an auxiliary verb, and an adjective.
No; an adjective must describe a noun. In this case, "flavors" is a noun. "Flavorful" is an adjective, though:The flavorful dish had many different flavors
Ekectronic what? The word "electronic" is an adjective, so it MUST describe a noun. Your adjective is just hanging there looking for something to do!
Must can be an auxiliary verb (Man must eat to live) or an adjective (This is a must book for your reading) or a noun (This rule is a must).Other meanings of must (all nouns) are:Unfermented Grape JuiceDamp smellFrenzy in a male elephant or other animal
No, it is not a conjunction. It is a restrictive auxiliary verb, and more rarely a noun or adjective.