Wet can be used as an adjective. It can also be used as a verb to describe an action.
either adjective ('the ground is wet') or verb ('the dog wet the carpet')
No, it is not. The word "wet" is either an adjective or a verb (to make wet).
There usually is. "The dog is wet." is a sentence containing a noun (dog) a verb (is) and an adjective (wet) with the definite article (the) thrown in for good measure.
There is no abstract noun form for the adjective moist, which describes a physical condition.The noun form for the adjective moist is moistness, a concrete noun.
Nouns are words for people, places, things, and ideas.Adjectives are words that describe nouns. Examples:a hot day (adjective hot, noun day)a hot pepper (adjective hot, noun pepper)a sweet pepper (adjective sweet, noun pepper)a sweet baby (adjective sweet, noun baby)a wet baby (adjective wet, noun baby)a wet day (adjective wet, noun day)
"Wet" is an adjective itself.
either adjective ('the ground is wet') or verb ('the dog wet the carpet')
No, it is not. The word "wet" is either an adjective or a verb (to make wet).
wet
wet suit, wet paint, wet floor.
Yes, it is. It is the superlative form of the adjective "damp" (slightly wet, or humid).
Yes, the word wet is a noun; it is also a verb (wet, wets, wetting, wetted) and an adjective (wet, wetter, wettest). Example uses: Noun: You mix the wet and the dry separately before combining them. Verb: You wet the drape when you watered that plant. Adjective: Don't sit there, that's wet paint.
Boggy or marshy
There usually is. "The dog is wet." is a sentence containing a noun (dog) a verb (is) and an adjective (wet) with the definite article (the) thrown in for good measure.
It can be either, depending on what it modifies. If it follows a noun, it can be an adjective phrase, but it is more often an adverb phrase answering "where." Example: The footprints in the wet sand had already disappeared - adjective, tells which footprints He left footprints in the wet sand - adverb, tells where they were left
There is no abstract noun form for the adjective moist, which describes a physical condition.The noun form for the adjective moist is moistness, a concrete noun.
Stupid you don't smoke wet that is an adjective