A few years ago was the first time I heard someone says something like "Her behavior is very suspect." And I'm all like, "Bitch, suspect is a noun, so treat it like one," except only in my head. Then I ran home to my dictionary and I'm like "Bitch was right -- suspect can be an adjective," except my mom heard me and I was grounded.
My question is: why? What is the need for "suspect" to exist as an adjective? We have the perfectly usable "suspicious," allowing "suspect" to unequivocally remain a noun (with the verb being distinguished by its pronunciation). What's up with this bullsnot?
And why am I parking on my driveway and driving on the parkway?
My question is: why? What is the need for "suspect" to exist as an adjective? We have the perfectly usable "suspicious," allowing "suspect" to unequivocally remain a noun (with the verb being distinguished by its pronunciation). What's up with this bullsnot?
And why am I parking on my driveway and driving on the parkway?