This is in addition to normal adjectival use, as in a twenty-pound-a-week pay-rise.
This often corresponds to the English past participle, both in fully adjectival use and in passive voice.
Other examples of the adjectival use are: kadar-lai 'city folk', azra-zain 'sea-lands, sc.
Luntz, who road-tested the adjectival use of "Democrat" with a focus group in 2001, has concluded that the only people who really dislike it are highly partisan adherents of the-how you say?
Some other verbs retain participles in -n for certain adjectival uses, such as drunken and sunken.
These days, especially in its adjectival use, the first syllable of goddam is not a reference to the Deity.
Avoid adjectival use of US except in heads or compounds such as US-Russian.
However, the adjectival use of "jury" in the sense of makeshift or temporary dates from at least 1616, when it appeared in John Smith's A Description of New England.
The verbal use of used to should not be confused with the adjectival use of the same expression, meaning "familiar with", as in I am used to this, we must get used to the cold.
The adjectival use of symphonia meaning, "in unison", is found in the Hymni Homerica, ad Mercurium 51; both instances date from the 6th century BCE.