The abstract noun forms of the verb to represent are representation and the gerund, representing.
The concrete noun forms of the verb to represent are representer and representative, words for a person or a thing.
It can be an adjective, as it is the past tense/past participle of the verb "to represent."
It's an adjective. For example, John has a shiny car. The adjective is shiny because its describing what the car is.
No, it is a verb or a noun (to go around, to surround; a round shape). The adjective form is circular.
It is an adjective.It is a an adjective.
No, it is an adverb. The adjective is clumsy.
"Represent" is a verb, not an adjective. It is used to describe the action of standing for or symbolizing something.
It can be an adjective, as it is the past tense/past participle of the verb "to represent."
The adverbial form of "represent" is "representatively" or "representationally". The word "representative" can be used as either a noun or an adjective.
For democracy is often used adjective parliamentary.
No, hungrier is an adjective, the corresponding noun is hungriness.
No, it is a characteristic or defining attribute. Adjectives may have the same spelling as nouns that represent things.
The number value hundred (one hundred, 100) is a cardinal number. The adjective form is hundredth, which can also represent a fractional value (one one-hundredth = 1/100).
....There isn't an adjective form of every word. Onomatopoeia is only a noun, and it is in the context of the English language, so it's sorta 2nd person
It's an adjective. For example, John has a shiny car. The adjective is shiny because its describing what the car is.
No, the word 'stronger' is the comparative form for the adjective strong.positive: strongcomparative: strongersuperlative: strongest
He did some actionable things in college which made the teacher angry. It is one word to represent adjective of a verb.
No, it is a characteristic or defining attribute. Adjectives may have the same spelling as nouns that represent things.