no
Struggling
The word struggling is the present participle of the verbto struggle. The present participle form of a verb is also an adjective, and a verbal noun called a gerund.
The word 'struggling' is a noun form, a gerund. The present participle of the verb to struggle also functions as an adjective and a verbal noun.The word 'struggle' is both a verb and a noun.
No, it is a verb or a noun (to go around, to surround; a round shape). The adjective form is circular.
It is an adjective.It is a an adjective.
Struggling
No, it does not."Frantic" is an adjective. "Struggle" is a noun or a verb.
No, battled is not an adjective nor is it an adverb. It is a verb. One related adjective is the word "embattled" (involved in a battle or struggle).
The word struggling is the present participle of the verbto struggle. The present participle form of a verb is also an adjective, and a verbal noun called a gerund.
The word 'struggling' is a noun form, a gerund. The present participle of the verb to struggle also functions as an adjective and a verbal noun.The word 'struggle' is both a verb and a noun.
No. This is at best a phrase, at worst an adjective and a noun.
Failure, adversity, misfortune, catastrophe, struggle, wreck, etc.
The word war as a verb: fight, combat, battle. The word war as a noun: battle, fights, struggle, combat, conflict. The word war as a adjective: martial, military, battle.
No. The word struggling is the present participle of the verb "to struggle" - it may also be used as an adjective. (The adverb form strugglingly is practically never seen.)
lutter = to struggle la lutte = the struggle (also means wrestling, as in the sport)
hay what did he struggle with
Our Struggle was created in 1945.