The word 'delivery' is a noun.
The adjective form is the past participle of the verb to deliver: delivered.
Example: The delivered package was waiting on my doorstep.
The adjective form of "deliver" is "delivered." It describes something that has been conveyed or sent, such as in the phrase "delivered package." Another related adjective is "delivery," which can describe aspects related to the act of delivering, such as in "delivery service."
No, it is a verb (to deliver). Adjectives related to the verb include delivered and deliverable. The noun form delivery is also used as a noun adjunct (e.g. delivery van, delivery schedule).
The compound noun pizza shop does not have an adjective form. The word pizza is used as a noun adjunct (attributive noun) in terms such as pizza delivery and pizza parlor.
The word "scrapped" can be used as a verb or an adjective. An example as a past-tense verb would be "The delivery company scrapped several of its old trucks." As an adjective, an example would be "We examined several scrapped cars before finding the used part we needed."
The word 'slow' is an adjective (slow, slower, slowest) and a verb (slow, slows, slowing, slowed).The word 'slowly' is the adverb form of the adjective 'slow', used to modify a verb, an adjective, or another adverb.The word 'so' is an adverb and a conjunction. In the terms, 'so slow' or 'so slowly', the word 'so' is functioning as an adverb.Which is correct ('so slow' or 'so slowly') depends on what the term is modifying; for example:The mail delivery here is so slow. (the adjective 'slow' is the predicate nominative, describing the subject noun 'delivery'; the adverb 'so' is modifying the adjective)The cat crept so slowly that the bug never saw him. (the adverb 'so' is modifying the adverb 'slowly', which in turn is modifying the verb 'crept')
The word impertinent is an adjective. She argued with passion, but her delivery was impertinent. Some synonyms for impertinent are arrogant, brash, rude, uncivil, and impudent.
No, the English word "postal" is not a noun, but an adjective, meaning "relating to the collection, sorting, and delivery of mail".
Yes, "on-time" is hyphenated when used as an adjective before a noun, such as in "on-time delivery." However, when used as an adverb or after a noun, it is typically written as two separate words, like in "The train arrived on time."
for delivery
No, it is a verb or a noun (to go around, to surround; a round shape). The adjective form is circular.
already answered --- Slimy, Slime, Slimey (as you said) depends on what you're thinking of .
It is an adjective.It is a an adjective.