The verb to consider has a related adjective formed from the past participle, considered. There is a derivative form (considerate) that means "prone to consider others." There is another derivative form (considerable) that has a modern connotation of "substantial" (e.g. considerable wealth).
think, see, believe, rate, judge, suppose, deem, view, contemplate, weigh, deliberate, ponder, meditate, ruminate, think about, take into consideration
Noun forms for the verb to consider are consideration and the gerund, considering.
The adjective form of consider is considerable.
The nouns are: mom and room The adjective is: messy Note: The word your is a possessive pronoun but some consider it an adjective.
It can be, as in a considered opinion. The word is the past tense and past participle of the verb (to consider) and may be used as an adjective. This has a separate meaning from the related adjectives considerable and considerate.
"Frightened" is the past participle of the verb "to frighten". In English, participles can behave like adjectives, and many will consider them a sub-class of adjectives. "Frightened" does past the adjective test (you can say "more frightened, very frightened"). So if it helps you to consider participles to be adjectives, go ahead.
considerable or considerate. considerable meaning something worth considering. considerate describing someone who considers the feelings of others, aka nice.
a new the business the automobile
No. Lowest is strictly an adjective or adverb.
"New" is the adjective.
The nouns are: mom and room The adjective is: messy Note: The word your is a possessive pronoun but some consider it an adjective.
It is not a sentence, but an infinitive phrase -- the infinitive verb "to consider" followed by the noun "proposal." Depending on how it appeared in a sentence, it could be either a noun phrase, adjective phrase, or adverb phrase.Their only option was to consider the proposal. (noun)The decision to consider the proposal was controversial. (adjective)The board met in special session to consider the proposal. (adverb)
No, it is a verb (to judge, take into account, or think over).
I think this is either a major typo, or someone starting to learn English in an unnecessarily bottom-up approach. I guess to answer your literal question: "consider" verb - to consider (infinitive) noun - consideration adjective - considerate adverb - considerately
It can be, as in a considered opinion. The word is the past tense and past participle of the verb (to consider) and may be used as an adjective. This has a separate meaning from the related adjectives considerable and considerate.
Consider the adjective "bright." The comparative form is brighter, the superlative form is brightest.
"Frightened" is the past participle of the verb "to frighten". In English, participles can behave like adjectives, and many will consider them a sub-class of adjectives. "Frightened" does past the adjective test (you can say "more frightened, very frightened"). So if it helps you to consider participles to be adjectives, go ahead.
The word considering is a verb. It is the present participle of consider. Considering can also be a preposition.
You could consider only tree a noun. Or apple as well, since it is used as a noun adjunct, not technically an adjective. You could also consider "apple tree" to be a compound noun.
The word "snowy" is ordinarily an adjective meaning white, or when applied to the weather.As opposed to snow-white (a compound adjective), snowy could be considered an adverb if white is an adjective, because it acts like the adverb "very."Alternatively, you could consider "snowy white" to be a form of the compound adjective snow-white.