Businesspeople are sending more messages than ever before, that's why communication skills are increasingly important.
Both. It just matters how you use it in the sentence.
Prodigious is not a verb, it is an adjective. You can tell just by looking at him that his ego is prodigious.
My dictionary said plus is a noun, an adjective, a preposition and a conjunction but not a verb.
Avaricious is an adjective that means greedy. A sentence for avaricious is: Some companies are avaricious and will do anything to get money.
In any context, the grasping power of diagram is multifold compared to text
An adjective is a part of speech that is commonly called a "describing" word. An adjective is used to describe a noun in a sentence. For example, in the sentence "The sun set behind the red barn." the adjective is the word "red", and the noun it is describing is the word "barn."
by adjective in the sentence
In a sentence.
NO but in the sentence "Use of the word "in" as an adjective is IN these days" the IN is an adjective
An adjective describes a noun.
'He was a worried boy.' In this sentence worried is describing the boy, therefore worried is an adjective.
Mezaire always followed a set schedule.
no
He always went to lunch at a set time. A set question is easy to answer.
apathetic is the adjective. His apathetic attitude annoys me!
He was stubbord and set in his opinions.
The word "meet" is not an adjective and cannot be used as an adjective.