What should be on “altruistic” or “altruist”?
I was to fill in a blank with proper word beside its definition which was:
Unselfish, more interested in the welfare of others than in one’s own.
One of the key answers is: “Altruistic”. I don’t know why I am feeling that there should be “altruist” instead of “altruistic” as the answer since “altruistic” are “tendencies, behaviour”. Can “altruist” be used too, as a noun?
If you are describing a thing, say a person,
you might write:
His (altruistic) behavior
Here the morphology is altruetic.
His altruistic behavior
- -of or like
- -a thing or person -root If you
are describing say in a copula/existential/stative way which (employs an article in English) You might
write: His
Who is an altruist
by his own admission? How do other questions tilt? How does “unselfish” in this question writer’s case relate to the third person – subject territory, but it is like an adjective – so yeah that’s a picky test ya got there? Altruist, in any morphology, isn’t in any menus or user guides…
If you are describing a thing, say a person,
you might write:
His (altruistic) behavior
Here the morphology is altruetic.
His altruistic behavior
- -of or like
- -a thing or person -root If you
are describing say in a copula/existential/stative way which (employs an article in English) You might
write: His
Who is an altruist
by his own admission? How do other questions tilt? How does “unselfish” in this question writer’s case relate to the third person – subject territory, but it is like an adjective – so yeah that’s a picky test ya got there? Altruist, in any morphology, isn’t in any menus or user guides…
If you are describing a thing, say a person,
you might write:
His (altruistic) behavior
Here the morphology is altruetic.
His altruistic behavior
- -of or like
- -a thing or person -root If you
are describing say in a copula/existential/stative way which (employs an article in English) You might
write: His
Who is an altruist
by his own admission? How do other questions tilt? How does “unselfish” in this question writer’s case relate to the third person – subject territory, but it is like an adjective – so yeah that’s a picky test ya got there? Altruist, in any morphology, isn’t in any menus or user guides…
If you are describing a thing, say a person,
you might write:
His (altruistic) behavior
Here the morphology is altruetic.
His altruistic behavior
- -of or like
- -a thing or person -root If you
are describing say in a copula/existential/stative way which (employs an article in English) You might
write: His
Who is an altruist
by his own admission? How do other questions tilt? How does “unselfish” in this question writer’s case relate to the third person – subject territory, but it is like an adjective – so yeah that’s a picky test ya got there? Altruist, in any morphology, isn’t in any menus or user guides…
If you are describing a thing, say a person,
you might write:
His (altruistic) behavior
Here the morphology is altruetic.
His altruistic behavior
- -of or like
- -a thing or person -root If you
are describing say in a copula/existential/stative way which (employs an article in English) You might
write: His
Who is an altruist
by his own admission? How do other questions tilt? How does “unselfish” in this question writer’s case relate to the third person – subject territory, but it is like an adjective – so yeah that’s a picky test ya got there? Altruist, in any morphology, isn’t in any menus or user guides…
If you are describing a thing, say a person,
you might write:
His (altruistic) behavior
Here the morphology is altruetic.
His altruistic behavior
- -of or like
- -a thing or person -root If you
are describing say in a copula/existential/stative way which (employs an article in English) You might
write: His
Who is an altruist
by his own admission? How do other questions tilt? How does “unselfish” in this question writer’s case relate to the third person – subject territory, but it is like an adjective – so yeah that’s a picky test ya got there? Altruist, in any morphology, isn’t in any menus or user guides…
If you are describing a thing, say a person,
you might write:
His (altruistic) behavior
Here the morphology is altruetic.
His altruistic behavior
- -of or like
- -a thing or person -root If you
are describing say in a copula/existential/stative way which (employs an article in English) You might
write: His
Who is an altruist
by his own admission? How do other questions tilt? How does “unselfish” in this question writer’s case relate to the third person – subject territory, but it is like an adjective – so yeah that’s a picky test ya got there? Altruist, in any morphology, isn’t in any menus or user guides…
If you are describing a thing, say a person,
you might write:
His (altruistic) behavior
Here the morphology is altruetic.
His altruistic behavior
- -of or like
- -a thing or person -root If you
are describing say in a copula/existential/stative way which (employs an article in English) You might
write: His
Who is an altruist
by his own admission? How do other questions tilt? How does “unselfish” in this question writer’s case relate to the third person – subject territory, but it is like an adjective – so yeah that’s a picky test ya got there? Altruist, in any morphology, isn’t in any menus or user guides…
If you are describing a thing, say a person,
you might write:
His (altruistic) behavior
Here the morphology is altruetic.
His altruistic behavior
- -of or like
- -a thing or person -root If you
are describing say in a copula/existential/stative way which (employs an article in English) You might
write: His
Who is an altruist
by his own admission? How do other questions tilt? How does “unselfish” in this question writer’s case relate to the third person – subject territory, but it is like an adjective – so yeah that’s a picky test ya got there? Altruist, in any morphology, isn’t in any menus or user guides…
If you are describing a thing, say a person,
you might write:
His (altruistic) behavior
Here the morphology is altruetic.
His altruistic behavior
- -of or like
- -a thing or person -root If you
are describing say in a copula/existential/stative way which (employs an article in English) You might
write: His
Who is an altruist
by his own admission? How do other questions tilt? How does “unselfish” in this question writer’s case relate to the third person – subject territory, but it is like an adjective – so yeah that’s a picky test ya got there? Altruist, in any morphology, isn’t in any menus or user guides…