"Analytical" or "analytic".
An adjective that can describe a character analysis is summary.
Astute is an adjective. As in an astute analysis.
The word 'analytical' is an adjective form of the abstract noun analysis.
There is no actual adjective for breath or breathe. The word breath is sometimes used as a noun adjunct (e.g. breath analysis, breath mints). There is an adjective breathy which refers to a manner of speaking.
There is no actual adjective for breath or breathe. The word breath is sometimes used as a noun adjunct (e.g. breath analysis, breath mints). There is an adjective breathy which refers to a manner of speaking.
"Analytical" or "analytic".
"Analytical" or "analytic".
An adjective that can describe a character analysis is summary.
Astute is an adjective. As in an astute analysis.
The word 'analytical' is an adjective form of the abstract noun analysis.
There is no actual adjective for breath or breathe. The word breath is sometimes used as a noun adjunct (e.g. breath analysis, breath mints). There is an adjective breathy which refers to a manner of speaking.
There is no actual adjective for breath or breathe. The word breath is sometimes used as a noun adjunct (e.g. breath analysis, breath mints). There is an adjective breathy which refers to a manner of speaking.
of, pertaining to, or determined by regression analysis: regression curve; regression equation. dictionary.com
No, earliest is an adjective. "The earliest record of bread-making is from ..."Earliest is a word used to describe something that came in first. with analysis, it describes so it is an adjective not a verb..
The proper adjective is Martian and it is always capitalized. It would also be a demonym for any hypothetical native person of Mars.
It is never one word: there is no such English as "indepth." But you should definitely separate the words "in depth," or more commonly, put a hyphen between them: "in-depth analysis." This is probably more correct because "in-depth" is a compound adjective (this occurs when two words are put together with a hyphen to form an adjective; other examples are "well-deserved" and "long-awaited").
The word regression is a noun. It cannot be an adjective. When it is paired with another noun, it is a noun adjunct.Examples:"In statistics, regression analysis refers to techniques for modeling and analyzing several variables""Regression techniques are used by psychologists."