There is the participle form "thieving."
it is light-fingered
thieving
notorious
No. Instead it is a noun. A proper adjective would be a word that describes something, but it is also a name of a place or style, etc.for example: I like French fries. I like Chinesefood.
Middle Eastern is the only proper adjective in the sentence above. It describes "greenhouses."
Tasmanian is the proper adjective for Tasmania.
Vietnamese is the proper adjective for Vietnam.
The proper adjective for the proper noun 'Celt' is Celtic.Please note that a proper noun and a proper adjective is always capitalized.
Yes, European is a proper adjective that describes a noun as of or from Europe.
swiss is the answer
The proper adjective to describe someone or something from Ireland is Irish, a proper adjective.
The proper adjective British describes a noun of or from the proper noun Britain.
No, the adjective Hawaiian is a proper adjective, a word that describes a noun; or a proper noun for a person from Hawaii, also a proper noun.
The word British is a proper adjective describing a noun as of or from Britain. A proper adjective as well as a proper noun is always capitalized.
An adjective describes a noun. You could potentially describe a person or thing as "Vietnamese".
Hungarian is an adjective that describes people from Hungary.
Kentuckian is the proper adjective for Kentucky.
No, thief is a noun.
The proper adjective for the proper noun Charles Dickens is Dickensian, which describes a noun as of or reminiscent of the novels of Charles Dickens; suggesting the poor social conditions or characters as depicted in the novels of Dickens.
An adjective describes a noun - beautiful (adj) butterfly (noun).A proper adjective describes a name - Indian (pro. adj) pottery (noun)The word "they're" is a contraction of "they are" and does have a descriptive quality, but only in the verb form, as it sets you up for what a group of people are doing in the present time.