There are several adjectives associated with the word 'count'. These are the ones that occur to me: countable, counted, countless, counting.
"'Happiness' is not a countable noun."
"Those items are not counted in the total.'
"There are countless reasons for their unhappiness.'
"An abacus is a counting frame'.
No, Count isn't an adjective! Sorry!
To find that out you could go to Dictionary.com :)
-Madison
Yes, bloody is an adjective because it is an describing word; as in blue, or hairy, or bloody. *Numbers also count as adjectives.
Ten
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.
No, the indefinite pronoun 'most' is used in place of a noun.The adjective 'most' is used before a noun to describe that noun.The adjective 'most' is used before both count nouns and uncountable nouns.Examples:Most have responded to our inquiry. (the pronoun 'most' takes the place of a noun for an unknown or unnamed number)The winning team had the most points. (the adjective 'most' describes the count noun 'points')This compound has the most oxygen. (the adjective 'most' describes the uncountable noun 'oxygen')
The noun form of the adjective 'agreeable' is agreeableness.
Yes, bloody is an adjective because it is an describing word; as in blue, or hairy, or bloody. *Numbers also count as adjectives.
Ten
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.
Yes, thankfully we can use it as an adverb. It is the adverb form of the adjective thankful.
No, the indefinite pronoun 'most' is used in place of a noun.The adjective 'most' is used before a noun to describe that noun.The adjective 'most' is used before both count nouns and uncountable nouns.Examples:Most have responded to our inquiry. (the pronoun 'most' takes the place of a noun for an unknown or unnamed number)The winning team had the most points. (the adjective 'most' describes the count noun 'points')This compound has the most oxygen. (the adjective 'most' describes the uncountable noun 'oxygen')
Yes, the adjective 'both' can be used to describe some non-count nouns; for example:Both sheep have recovered from their injuries.We painted both barracks in olive drab.Some non-count nouns are words for substances, like tea or sand. These non-count nouns do have a plural form used as a shorthand for 'types of' or 'kinds of', like black tea and jasmine tea or fine sand and coarse sand. The adjective 'both' can be used for these these plurals; for example: They have jasmine and black. I like both teas.They have fine and coarse. Both sands are the same price.The adjective 'both' can't be used non-count nouns for other substances such as elements, like oxygen or aluminum. These nouns have no plural form; the adjective 'both' can be used to describe the units of these, for example:You need both tanks of oxygen.I'll take both rolls of aluminum.The adjective 'both' can't be used for aggregate non-count nouns, such as news, advice, or education unless there was a qualifying noun preceding it, for example: both broadcasts of newsboth pieces of adviceboth forms of educationThe indefinite pronoun 'both' can take the place of any abstract nouns, for example:He has intelligence and wit, both are valuable assets.
The noun form of the adjective 'agreeable' is agreeableness.
The word 'pleonastic' is an adjective, a word to describe a noun; example, pleonastic expressions.The noun form is pleonasm, which is accepted as a count or an uncountalbe noun.
The noun 'past' is a non-count noun as a word for the period of times before the present.The noun 'past' is a count noun as a word for the history of a person or a thing; the plural noun is pasts.The word 'past' is also an adjective, an adverb, and a preposition.
The prefix In- can be added to numerable.
Numbers (numerals) may or may not be considered adjectives, but they function the same way with nouns. The number 36 (thirty-six) by itself is a noun (e.g. count to 36).
No. The number fifteen can be an adjective (used with a noun) or a noun if it is just a number (e.g. "You have to count to fifteen"). It can be used as a pronoun ("Twenty people were injured and fifteen of those were hospitalized").