Yes, it is a participle, a kind of verb turned into an adjective. In English, present participles, which tell you what the thing is doing, are usually formed with -ing, and past passive participles, which tell you what has been done to it, with -ed.
No. The adjective hard describes work.Used as an adjective, the term hard-working can be hyphenated. e.g. hard-working man.
The correct is form is hardworking, an adjective and a compound word.
The word 'work' is a noun, a verb, and an adjective (workarea, work gloves, etc).The present participle of the verb 'to work' is also the adjective working, example:I have a working flashlight.The past participle of the verb 'to work' is also the adjective worked, example:The worked field will be planted next.
Working is a noun, but it could be an adjective you just have to look closely. It depends on the sentence.
Trabajando is working (adjective). The verb is trabajar (to work), and the noun is trabajo (work).
Yes, it is an adjective, and means "not functional, not working." The adjective "broken" is functioning as a predicate adjective (a form of subject complement), an adjective that follows a linking verb that restates the subject of the sentence (phone = broken).
No the word hardworking is an adjective not a noun. A noun form is hardworker.
The adjective form of the noun cube is cubic. A variant form is cubical (not to be confused with the working area, cubicle).
My family is dysfunctional. Or you could use an adjective like organised or loving or hard working
"Hard-working" is an adjective. It describes someone who puts in a lot of effort and diligence towards their work or tasks.
The word "working" is a present participle form of the verb "work." It can function as a main verb in continuous tenses, such as "I am working," or as a gerund, acting as a noun, as in "Working is essential for success." Additionally, it can serve as an adjective, as in "the working class."
An adverb describes a verb, another adverb, or an adjective. "New" is an adjective.