The list of verbs, nouns, prepositions and adjectives for
fun

subject: Statistics

1. What are adjectives for fun?

The list contains adjectives for fun sorted by frequency:

2. Verb examples for fun:

Below there are verbs used with fun. Some of them refer to a noun as a predicate, while others as objects.

What is an adjective for fun

The aim of this page is to give you the answer for the followin questions: - what is an adjective for fun; - adjective of fun; - adjective examples for fun; - fun adjective; - adjective fun; - fun noun; - is fun a noun.

Is fun a noun?

A word fun is a noun, that is described with adjectives, the most common are:

Adjectives to describe the fun

A sentence is a group of words that together make up a coherent statement. Every component has its unique role. Below we will concentrate on adjectives.

The list of common adjectives for fun

The adjective is a part of speech that modifies and enriches the noun. For the section Statistics the frequently used adjective(s) is/are:

The above list contains adjectives describing the searched noun. To make the search results more adequate, vocabulary is categorized into five sections:
- General vocabulary, the most popular and general descriptions;
- Business vocabulary, both simple and more specific words often used to describe economic phenomena;
- The field of statistics, an area closely related to this part of science;
- Law section, vocabulary specific for codes, laws and acts;
- IT section, used to describe programming language.

The list of words describing the noun fun is sorted by frequencyThat means, that in an IT section, vocabulary describing a fun will be slightly different than in a law section.

Verbs related to 'fun'

Note that this section contains verb examples which are presented in two forms, as a predicate and as a part of an object. Note that all verbs associated with the noun 'book' include words like contain, present or verbs like read and publish. See examples:

But on the other hand:

The first two examples refer to a noun as a predicate, while the next two are an object.

Last updated: Apr 10, 2026

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