No, luck is a noun. Lucky is an adjective.
No. It is an adverb. The noun is luck and the adjective is lucky.
Yes, it is an adjective based on the noun luck and the adjective lucky. The adverb form is luckily.
The adjective is "lucky." The adverb form is luckily.
LOVEBUG!!!!
No it is two separate words, an adjective and an abstract noun.
Lucky is the adjective from the noun luck. The word luck derives from an Old Dutch word. It derives from the Middle English word lucke, from the Middle Dutch word luc, short for gheluc which means happiness. See the related link for verification.
No, the word 'lucky' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun.Example: I'm wearing my lucky socks.The noun form of the adjective 'lucky' is luckiness.The word 'lucky' is the adjective form of the noun luck.
Antonyms for "luck" include misfortune, reversal, and the adjective nonadvantageous, as well as unfavorable and inauspicious.
The abstract noun form for the adjective 'lucky' is luckiness.The word 'lucky' is the adjective form of the abstract noun luck.
Luckily is the adverb of lucky.An example sentence is: "he luckily missed the flying debris".Another example is: "she luckily arrived on time for the interview despite the traffic jam".
Most likey a common noun, but I'm really not so fond to this....
The word 'unlucky' is an adjective form of the noun luck.