The verb "to people" has a past participle, peopled, which can be an adjective. The noun people has the related adjective popular (e.g. popular vote) which can also mean well-liked or well-known.
Yes. For example: An (ADJECTIVE) person --> A nice person A (MORE ADJECTIVE) person --> A nicer person
Yes, witty is an adjective--a witty person.
The adjective form is exasperating. David is an exasperating person.
Yes, it is an adjective to describe a person, or metaphorically a cleaning product.
No, neither form (councillor, counselor) is an adjective. It is a noun (a person).
Yes. For example: An (ADJECTIVE) person --> A nice person A (MORE ADJECTIVE) person --> A nicer person
The proper adjective to describe someone or something from Ireland is Irish, a proper adjective.
A proper adjective for a person from Florida is "Floridian."
"Aging" can either be an adjective (as in, "an aging person") or a gerund (as in, "The person was aging rapidly").
No it is a noun. Personal is the adjective. noun: She's a good person. adjective: She's a personal assistant in a large office.
Yes, witty is an adjective--a witty person.
Yes, confident is an adjective -- She is a confident person.
Decent is an adjective--a decent person
No. The word person is a noun. So are the words that mean a specific type of person.
personal
personal
The adjective form is exasperating. David is an exasperating person.