I would say that it stands out from the crowd. A very pure color.
The word "in" is usually a preposition (within, inside), e.g. in town.Without an object, it is an adverb (come in, settled in).The only common uses as adjective are to mean modern or fashionable (e.g. the in crowd) or exclusive (an inside or in joke, an in reference).
The word "crowd" is a noun, and nouns cannot be compared-- they can just have a singular (only one of them) or a plural (more than one). But the adjective is "crowded." You can compare the word crowded like this: crowded, more crowded, the most crowded. (Some adjectives are compared with an -er and an -est, like big/bigger/biggest. But crowded cannot be compared that way.)
No. It is not an adjective. An adjective describes something.
Yes, it is an adjective.
There can be a crowd (which is a noun) There can be to crowd (which is a verb) But there is no adjective.
No, it is an adjective. It is based on the noun crowd and the verb to crowd.
No, It is just a noun.
Adjective''loud'' while ''rang'' is an adverb
The word 'capacity' itself is used for the adjective, as in 'capacity crowd' or 'capacity enrollment'.
'Crowded' is the past participle of 'to crowd' and as such often acts as an adjective. E.g. 'The room was crowded'. 'To crowd' is usually a transitive verb.
No. Crowded is an adjective. The seldom-used adverb is "crowdedly."
I would say that it stands out from the crowd. A very pure color.
Red
The word 'crowd' is a common noun that can be used as a collective noun.Examples:common noun: A crowd had gathered around the bulletin board.collective noun: Some officers dispersed the crowd of gawkers.The word 'crowd' is also a verb: crowd, crowds, crowding, crowded.
No, bulling is not an adjective in the English language. It is the progressive form of the verb, bull, which means to shove or force ones way. example: The man was bulling his way through the crowd.
In its most common usage, in is a preposition. However, it can be an adjective in usages such as, "Orange is really in this year" (meaning "in fashion") or "The serve was in" (meaning "in bounds") or "The doctor is in" (meaning "in her office").A modern adjective use of the word means in vogue or in style, e.g. the in crowd.