Yes, it is considered an adjective if used with a noun (fifth place), and can also be a noun.
It is the ordinal number (5th) for the cardinal number five (5).
Cautious IS an adjective. An adjective is an action!
What is a fifth of a mile??
fifth
One fifth as a decimal is 0.20 One fifth as a percentage is 20%
yes
Fifth is a adjective
It can be. But not most of the time. If you need this for a test, I probably wouldnt use it.
Yes, "thirty-fifth" is hyphenated when used as a compound adjective before a noun or as a noun itself. For example, you would say "the thirty-fifth anniversary." However, when it stands alone as a noun, it can be written without the hyphen as "thirty fifth."
No, the word 'fifth' is a noun and an adjective.Examples:I made the appointment for the fifth of the month. (noun)The office is on the fifth floor. (adjective)A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence. The pronoun that takes the place of the noun 'fifth' is it.Example:This book is the fifth in the series. It picks up the story right where the last book left off.
These are some possible words: FIXED - repaired, or adjective for locked in place FIFTH - 5th, in the number five position
No, it is not. It is a adjective meaning previous, or a noun meaning the first of two (not the latter).Rarely, it is used to describe a school form student (e.g. fifth former).
Most often, the word class is a noun. example: He teaches the fifth grade class. In the following sentence, class is an adjective: Our class project won first place. The word class describes the project. Therefore, it is an adjective.
Il quinto anniversario is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "fifth anniversary."Specifically, the masculine singular definite article il-- which may or may not be included in the English translation -- is "the." The masculine ordinal adjective quinto means "fifth (5th)." The masculine noun anniversario translates as "anniversary."The pronunciation will be "eel KEEN-to AN-nee-ver-SA-ryo" in Italian.
The word 'departing' is the present participle, present tense of the verb to depart. The present participle of the verb is also a gerund, a verbal noun, and an adjective. Examples: Verb: We will be departing on the fifth. Noun: Departing is scheduled for June. Adjective: The departing flight is at six AM. A related noun form is departure.
A fifth of that something.A fifth of that something.A fifth of that something.A fifth of that something.
Well, a fifth is one fifth of one, that's why it's called a fifth, it's divided into five. If your question was 'what is a fifth a tenth of?', then the answer would be two. What is a fifth a seventh of? 1.4, etc.
One fifth plus one fifth is two fifths (2/5).