The noun or verb pity can used the present and past participles as adjectives: pitying and pitied.
The related derivative adjectives are pitiful and pitiable.
The word 'pity' is an abstract noun, a singular common noun; a word for feeling of sorrow and compassion caused by the suffering and misfortunes of others; a word for an emotion.The word 'pity' is also a verb.
No, pity is a noun or a verb. There are adjectives such as pitiful, pitying, pitied, and pitiable.
it could be pity, probity, enmity etc
The likely word is the adjective poignant (evoking sadness or pity).
'Pietas' is the Latin equivalent of 'piety'. It derives from the adjective pius, which is the English equivalent of 'pious'. 'Misericordia' is the Latin equivalent of 'pity'. It derives from the adjective 'miser', which is the English equivalent of 'miserable, unfortunate'.
The noun form of the adjective 'pathetic' is patheticness, a word for the state of being pathetic.A related noun form is pathos, a word for an element in life or in artistic representation that moves one to pity.
The adjective form of concept is conceptual.The adjective form of conception is conceptional.
The adjective form is cranial.
The word 'pity' is a noun, a word for feeling of sorrow and compassion caused by the suffering and misfortunes of others; a word for a thing.The word 'pity' is also a verb: pity, pities, pitying, pitied.
The adjective form for the pronoun they is their.
The Adjective form of Pathologist is Pathological.
The adjective form of concept is conceptual.The adjective form of conception is conceptional.