The adjective form of please is pleasant.
It may be considered an adjective when used with nouns, such as "washing machine", or it may be considered a noun adjunct, because the machine itself is not described by "washing."
No. Washed is the past tense verb of 'wash'.
No, it is a verb or a noun (to go around, to surround; a round shape). The adjective form is circular.
Suffixes added to the noun or verb "wash" include: -able to form the adjective washable (noun washability) -ing to form the present participle washing (noun, noun adjunct, verb) -er to form the noun washer (fastener, appliance, person) -y to form the rarely-seen adjectives washy, washier, washiest (noun washiness)
Dishes is either a noun or a verb, depending on how it's used. It is not an adjective. Noun Ex. I told you to wash the dishes. Verb Ex. That boxer dishes out a lot of punishment.
The adjective form of please is pleasant.
Yes, "washed" is a verb. It is the past tense and past participle form of the verb "wash," which means to clean something using water and often soap.
It may be considered an adjective when used with nouns, such as "washing machine", or it may be considered a noun adjunct, because the machine itself is not described by "washing."
No, thoroughly is an adverb. It modifies verbs or adjectives.For example, "thoroughly wash your hands" uses thoroughlyto modify the verb wash. And "it was thoroughly enjoyable" uses thoroughly to modify the adjective enjoyable.Many adverbs have an -ly ending, so that is one clue that a word might be an adverb.
Wash, Wash, Wash!
The singular form of "wash" is "washing."
well hand wash is to wash your hands and body wash is to wash your body but you could use both of them for the same thing.
Washed; wash/washing; will wash/[am/are/is] going to wash
You wash it
Yes, wash in/wash out dye washes out over about a few weeks some dyes last about 6 weeks. The wash in/wash out dyes are mostly made of vegetable oil so it's safer and certainly wash out :)
wish wish wash wash