The word 'crowd' is both a noun and a verb.
The adjective forms of the verb to crowd are:
Example uses:
The crowding onlookers began to block the emergency vehicles.
I was squashed on the crowded train for forty minutes.
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The word crowd is a noun or a verb. The present and past participles of the verb (to crowd) can be used as adjectives: crowded (busy) and crowding (impeding, pressing close), while crowding can also be used as a noun/gerund.
I would say that it stands out from the crowd. A very pure color.
The degrees of comparison for the word "crowd" are as follows: positive degree (crowd), comparative degree (larger crowd), and superlative degree (largest crowd). These degrees are used to compare the intensity or quality of the noun "crowd" in relation to other crowds. The positive degree simply states the existence of a crowd, the comparative degree compares it to another crowd, and the superlative degree highlights it as the greatest or most significant crowd.
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).
No. It is not an adjective. An adjective describes something.
Yes, it is an adjective.