No, it is an adjective. It is based on the noun quantity or the verb quantify.
many, very, enough, most, some
adjective of quantity describe ''how much'' of a thing is meant.
Not in modern usage. Plenty is usually a noun, and usually refers to an unspecified number, quantity, or value (plenty of people, plenty of time, plenty of food). *some sources classify "plenty" as a quantifier rather than a noun or adjective *historically the term "plenty" was also used to mean plentiful, which is an adjective
Yes, when it modifies a noun (e.g. seven days). As just a number, it is a noun.
The adjective in that sentence is empty.
Empty is an adjective. To be a predicate adjective, it needs to follow a linking verb.The glass is empty. (Is is the linking verb; emptyis the predicate adjective.)
The word 'emptiness' is the noun form of the adjective empty.Note: the word 'empty' is also a noun and a verb.
empty
Quantity
The noun form for the adjective empty is emptiness.The noun form for the verb to empty is the gerund, emptying.The word empty (empties) is a noun, a word for an empty container.
The word 'empty' is a noun (empty, empties), a verb (empty, empties, emptying, emptied, and an adjective (empty, emptier, emptiest).EXAMPLESnoun: Put the empty in the recycling bin.verb: I had to empty the closet to sort everything.adjective: We won't get far on an empty gas tank.
No, the word 'endless' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun.The abstract noun form of the adjective 'endless' is endlessness.The word 'endless' is the adjective form of the abstract noun end.
Empty is an adjective. It describes the state of something such as an empty feeling. Empty is also a verb.
The word "many" is an adjective, because it can be used to "describe" a quantity.
There are only plurals for nouns and empty is a adjective, so there is none.
Yes, "nineteenth" is an adjective that describes the position or quantity of something in the series of nineteen.