powerful
The adjective form of "power" is "powerful."
No, power in power outage is a noun used as an adjective. Cf. student unrest.
An adjective
Foggy is the adjective of fog.
The adjective form for the noun collision is collisional.
The adjective form of "power" is "powerful."
The word power is a noun, a verb, and an adjective. Example uses: Noun: The power was out, so my alarm didn't go off. Verb: You need to power the mower before you can test it. Adjective: Your iron isn't broken, the power cord came out of the socket.
The reason we start on low power adjective on a microscope is because if we put it on high power the power may go down and we then have to charge it. from: Alexislily1 over and out
A tyrant is a person who rules with absolute power. The adjective is tyrannical.
powerful is your mom
No, power in power outage is a noun used as an adjective. Cf. student unrest.
No. Power is a noun, or an adjective (adjunct), or verb (to provide power). It cannot be used as a preposition.
control freak
No, it is not. The word "strong" is an adjective.
No. Pyramids is a plural noun. The adjective form would be pyramidal.
That is the correct spelling of the adjective "supreme" (highest in power or position).
No formidable is not a verb. It is an adjective.