The adjective for "sign" is "symbolic" or "indicative."
Conventional is an adjective. An -al ending is often a sign that a word is an adjective: for example, comical, radical, minimal, bestial, and hypothetical.
Sign can be an verb or a noun depending on how it is used in a sentence. Did Eli Manning sign your football? (sign = verb) If you read the sign, you'll know where to go. (sign = noun)
it is an adjective!
Adjective.
The usual adjective is intrusive. The present participle intruding can also be an adjective.
a
doesn't
doesn't
The adjective meaning, "of, like, or resembling a hexagon" is hexagonal.
No, "sign up" is not hyphenated when used as a verb (e.g., "Please sign up for the newsletter"). However, when used as a noun or adjective, it can be hyphenated as "sign-up" (e.g., "The sign-up sheet is on the table").
Conventional is an adjective. An -al ending is often a sign that a word is an adjective: for example, comical, radical, minimal, bestial, and hypothetical.
This is a matter of idiom only: "open" is recognized as an adjective, with the same substantive meaning as "opened", as well as a verb, while "close" is not. "Close" does have an adjective meaning, with a different pronunciation, but that adjective does not mean substantively the same thing as "closed"; instead it means "near" or "nearby".
Yes, the sentence does have a predicate adjective. A predicate adjective is an adjective that follows a linking verb and restates the subject. A linking verb is a verb that acts like an equal sign; the subject of the sentence is or becomes the object of the verb (TEACHER = ANGRY).
Sign can be an verb or a noun depending on how it is used in a sentence. Did Eli Manning sign your football? (sign = verb) If you read the sign, you'll know where to go. (sign = noun)
No, the word grisly is an adjective, a word that describes a noun as causing horror or disgust.It was a grisly accident that impaled the driver with a stop sign.
The word 'deaf' is a noun form as a word for people who are deaf considered as a group.example: I'm taking sign language lessons for communicating with the deaf.The noun form of the adjective deaf is deafness.
No, stop is not an adjective. Stop can be either a verb or a noun. (stop, stopped, stopped; bus stop) When used with another noun (e.g. stop sign), it is called a noun adjunct (attributive noun).