An adjective derivative (derivative adjective) is an adjective formed from a noun or verb by the addition of a suffix. Examples: glamor - glamorous honor - honorable plenty - plentiful
The phrase "in addition" is a prepositional phrase in which "in" is the preposition and "addition" is its object. This phrase, as a phrase, is not a part of speech, although it may function as one, probably an adjective or adverb.
"Joe do you have an extra pencil that I could borrow?"
The word prior is an adjective. It means in advance or previous.
Yes, you can start a sentence with the word plus (as a noun or adjective, not as a verb). Examples: Noun: Plus is the sign of addition. Noun: Plus is the only entry I want to see on my savings account. Adjective: Plus signs after the A were spread across the top of my math test!
Additional :D
The noun addition has the related adjective form additional and the adverb form additionally.
The noun addiction has the adjective form additional and the adverb form additionally (in addition).The less-common related adjective and adverb are the derivatives additive and additively.
An adjective derivative (derivative adjective) is an adjective formed from a noun or verb by the addition of a suffix. Examples: glamor - glamorous honor - honorable plenty - plentiful
Adjective addition adding
The word 'additional' is the adjective form of the noun addition.
The word additional is an adjective. It is a supplement.
The phrase "in addition" is a prepositional phrase in which "in" is the preposition and "addition" is its object. This phrase, as a phrase, is not a part of speech, although it may function as one, probably an adjective or adverb.
"Joe do you have an extra pencil that I could borrow?"
Yes, it can be a compound preposition, used to form adjective phrases. The adverbial form is "as well as" (which can also mean in addition to).
With the addition of -ness, the adjective tranquil becomes the noun tranquilness. Other noun forms are tranquility and tranquilizer.
A derivative adverb would be the adverb form of a derivative adjective: one formed from a noun or a verb by the addition of a suffix (and possibly by a prefix as well). An example would be the adjective lawful (from the noun law) and the adverb lawfully.