Light, navy, creamy, dark etc
The word 'blue' is a noun and an adjective.The noun blue is a word for a color: Blue is my favorite color.The adjective blue describes a noun: The blue car is mine.The adjective blue can be a predicate adjective, used as an object of the verb or to describe the object of a verb:My favorite color is blue.I have a blue car.
No, it is an adjective, or a noun when used for the color itself.
It is a verb, and also an adjective and noun. ex. (v.) Some mushrooms will blue when crushed. ex. (n.) Blue is a nice color. ex. (adj.) Blue flowers are quite rare in nature.
Yes, blue is an adjective. An adjective describes something. All colors and numbers count as adjectives. (Ex. She had a BLUE shirt on.) The word "blue" describes the shirt.
"ish" is the suffix. When added to the adjective "blue" (the stem in this case) it indicates approximation. Other common use of this suffix can be turning a noun to an adjective, similarly to the suffix "y": "Freak" (noun) + y = "freaky" (adjective) "Freak" (noun) + ish = "freakish" (adjective)
The word 'blue' is a noun and an adjective.The noun blue is a word for a color: Blue is my favorite color.The adjective blue describes a noun: The blue car is mine.The adjective blue can be a predicate adjective, used as an object of the verb or to describe the object of a verb:My favorite color is blue.I have a blue car.
The word blue is a noun, a word for a color or a pigment. The word blue is an adjective, used to describe a noun as that color. The word blue is a verb, to make or become blue.
Turquoise can function as a noun or an adjective. As a noun, it refers to a blue-green mineral or a shade of blue-green color. As an adjective, it describes something of a blue-green color resembling that of the turquoise gemstone.
No, it is an adjective, or a noun when used for the color itself.
The adjective in the phrase "Jessica's blue scarf and gloves" is "blue," which describes the color of the scarf. The word "Jessica's" is a possessive adjective, indicating that the scarf and gloves belong to Jessica. Therefore, "Jessica's" is indeed a possessive adjective, while "blue" is a descriptive adjective.
Yes, it describes a noun. As in : This car is blue. It can be a noun itself when it describes a color (e.g. the blue of the ocean).
No, because blue describes the color of a noun, so it's an adjective. You wouldn't say, " I used blue,", you would say, " I used a blue marker," or something similar.
No, blue describes something and so it is an adjective.
Blue can be used as a noun, "Blue is pretty.", but is usually used as an adjective, "The blue crab is tasty." Intangible things can be nouns. One cannot buy a word, a thought, or a motive, but all three words are nouns.
It is a verb, and also an adjective and noun. ex. (v.) Some mushrooms will blue when crushed. ex. (n.) Blue is a nice color. ex. (adj.) Blue flowers are quite rare in nature.
The abstract noun of the adjective "blue" is "blueness."
Blue-lipped is a compound adjective.