No it's a verb.
The adverbial form of "represent" is "representatively" or "representationally". The word "representative" can be used as either a noun or an adjective.
No, hungrier is an adjective, the corresponding noun is hungriness.
....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
No, "unconditional" is an adjective, not a noun. Nouns are words that represent a person, place, thing, or idea, while adjectives describe or modify nouns.
it changes an adjective into a noun. He is an efficient runner. ----> adjective He is efficient -----> predicate adjective. What is his efficiency? -----> noun objective case. Efficiency is a desirable quality. ----> noun subjective case. He is a democratic ruler. ---> adjective. His rule is democratic. ------> predicate adjective. The best of all governments is democracy. ------> noun objective case. Democracy is coming to the U.S.A. --> noun subjective case (Song by Lenard Cohen)
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, it is a characteristic or defining attribute. Adjectives may have the same spelling as nouns that represent things.
No, hungrier is an adjective, the corresponding noun is hungriness.
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.
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
No, the word 'stronger' is the comparative form for the adjective strong.positive: strongcomparative: strongersuperlative: strongest
It's an adjective. For example, John has a shiny car. The adjective is shiny because its describing what the car is.
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.