Juvenile
fuss
No, the word "childish" is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun.The abstract noun form of the adjective "childish" is childishness.The word "childish" is the adjective form of the concrete noun "child".
I have to admit that I can get very childish about signs sometimes. my brother is very childish.
The word 'childishly' is the adverb form of the adjective 'childish'.The noun form of the adjective 'childish' is childishness.The word 'childish' is the adjective form of the noun child.
The words 'juvenile' and 'infantile' are two synonyms for the word 'childish'.
The word behaviour is a noun. It is the way in which one behaves.
The suffix "ish" in the word "childish" is used to suggest that something has childlike qualities or characteristics but may not be fully or genuinely childish. It indicates a degree of resemblance or similarity to the main root word.
ish.---Actually, -ish is a suffix, not a prefix. A prefix is the front part of a word. For instance, take the word immature. That means childish, and the prefix is im- which means not. So an immature person is not mature, but childish.If you want another suffix for child that makes the meaning the same, you can add -like. So a person can be childlike.
Children, Childish, Childproof ... childlike
Behaviour that offends one another.
No, the word 'childish' is the adjective form of the noun 'child'.A noun is a word for a person, a place, or a thing.An adjective is a word that describes a noun.Example:He is always pulling childish pranks. (adjective)Even a child would think twice before doing such things. (noun)
childish