Exact(2)
His name has been fashioned into a useful adjective.
As soups became more sophisticated -- as opposed to mere nourishment -- the bread left the broth, but the name stuck (as did that most useful adjective "soppy," applied to people as squishy as the steeped bread).
Similar(58)
THE French have two very useful adjectives at hand when they like a restaurant: honest and correct.
Back then, most people had a wider command of useful adjectives than they do today, and certain four-letter words, now heard on every street corner, were confined to army barracks.
It can sometimes be hard to know how to take a slogan T-shirt, so one eBay seller provided some useful adjectives when selling a white T emblazoned with "I'm feeling rapey": for the avoidance of doubt, bidders were looking at an "offensive cool geeky funny slogan tshirt".
To describe yourself, include useful adjectives.
The word "fine" is a useful, descriptive adjective when you want to express superior quality or the highest grade, such as a "fine wine" or "fine dining".
He's using adjectives.
Why use any adjective?
"The labels as nouns are less useful than as adjectives and adverbs that describe people, places, things, and actions They allow for a recognition of the diverse and complicated ways we move in the world as human beings".
"Useful" is Roberts' favourite adjective to describe the site, and in the course of our conversation at the company's bright north London office (where the most obvious decoration is a giant poster of fairytale goblin Rumpelstiltskin spinning flax into gold), she uses it several times.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com