The noun and adjective of obey are obedience and obedient, respectively.
It is a noun. Obedient is an adjective, and obey is a verb.
disobedience
Obedient(The verb to obey also has the participle adjective obeyed.)
No. It is a noun (or separate verb) that is widely used as an adjunct: slave quarters, slave ship, slave master.
The noun forms of the verb to obey are obedience, and the gerund, obeying.
Examples of adjectives that are formed from a noun are:air (noun) - airy (adjective)artist (noun) - artistic (adjective)beauty (noun) - beautiful (adjective)blood (noun) - bloody (adjective)fish (noun) - fishy (adjective)hope (noun) - hopeful (adjective)length (noun) - lengthy (adjective)memory (noun) - memorable (adjective)politics (noun) - political (adjective)thought (noun) - thoughtful (adjective)use (noun) - useful (adjective)water (noun) - watery (adjective)
Obedient
obedient
No, it is a verb or a noun (to go around, to surround; a round shape). The adjective form is circular.
obey is a verb, not adjective. However if you are looking for a word that describes a person who obeys easily, then that word is obedient.
The word 'Buddhistic' is the adjective form of the noun Buddhism.The adjective 'Buddhistic' is a proper adjective; the noun 'Buddhism' is a proer noun. A proper adjective and a proper noun are always capitalized.
The abstract noun for the adjective disobedient is disobedience.