Yes it can be (abandoned babies, abandoned cars).The word abandoned is the past tense and past participle of the verb "to abandon."
Some adjective to describe a car are:canary yellowChevroletclunkercobalt blueCompactconservativeconvertiblecustomized
Deserted can be a verb and an adjective. Verb: Past tense of the verb 'desert'. Adjective: Abandoned.
The word 'deserted' is a verb, the past tense of the verb 'to desert' and an adjective to describe something as uninhabited, abandoned, unfrequented. Example uses: Verb: Everyone deserted the beach when a wild storm blew in. Adjective: The deserted theater was becoming a fire hazard.
The first word in a sentence is always capitalized.A proper noun is always capitalized.A proper noun is the name or title of a specific person, place, or thing.A proper adjective is always capitalized. A proper adjective is an adjective derived from a proper noun.
I had literally snatched the abandoned dog from the jaws of death. The abandoned car had no tires. The shipwreck was abandoned where she had foundered.
"The sailors abandoned the sinking ship." "His friends abandoned him when he got into trouble." "He discovered gold in an abandoned silver mine."
They wildly ran through the mall.
Since traumatic is an adjective you use it as a way to describe things, mostly events.
Yes it can be (abandoned babies, abandoned cars).The word abandoned is the past tense and past participle of the verb "to abandon."
Abandoned is a verb (past tense of abandon) and an adjective (an abandoned building).
The adjective form of the word "abandon" is - abandoned. It is used thus : "Henry was an abandoned child" - where the word means 'forsaken' or "The party was wild and abandoned" - where the word means 'uninhibited' or "The abandoned caste dominated the hill" - where it means 'deserted'.
"Abandonada" in Spanish means "abandoned" in English. It is the feminine form of the adjective.
Here are the sentences: 'I am negative' or 'Today was a bad day for many negative reasons.'
Sentences can be constructed by using that word as an adjective or as a verb.
In English, the word 'Italian' can be an adjective or a noun depending on its use. In the sentence 'She is Italian' and 'this is an Italian car' the word 'Italian' is an adjective. In the sentences 'Here come the Italians' and 'Is he an Italian' the word 'Italian' is a noun.
You can use it as an adjective: "The bleeding patient was transferred to the emergency room." or you can use it as a verb: "He was bleeding all over the new carpet."