I've been told it's an eponym. But that's not correct because an eponym is a word that is derived from someone's name. Like "Atlas"
Using slan in a community
An example of a fruit is a banana. An example of a type of computer is a desktop. An emaple of a vegetable is asparagus. An example of a type of dog is a Terrior. An example of a word that describes a student is studious.
A pet peeve is a rather minor frustration that for some reason really makes a person mad. These are very individual. Your pet peeves may not bother me at all. Here are some typical pet peeves: * People who take their dog for a walk but don't pick up the droppings * smacking gum loudly * sniffing over and over instead of using a Kleenex * using a cell phone in public and talking very loudly A pet peeve is something very trivial that a particular person finds extremely irritating.
it means a reason to do something. example: the incentive of working is to get money!
This quote is attributed to Winston Chruchill and is a good tongue-in-cheek example of pedantic language: Ending a sentence with a preposition is something up with which I will not put.
calling someone a liar or something really mean
describes something that is already. EXAMPLE: thing IS so-and-so.
observation is when observe something observation describes a adjective and a adjective describes a Noun Example: I saw The Bird Break The Classroom Window..(When you observing something)
Name calling the term used when a person calls someone or something else names. An example sentence is: The name calling between the two, was very sad.
Yes, for example: He spoke loudly. Spoke is the verb and loudly describes how.
Enough to last you one year. They send you a large base amount, like 500 for an example, and they keep on sending it when you need more for one year.
A prepositional phrase is any grouping of words that describes where, how, when, something is done or which one has done an action. "The ball was found under the bed." is an example of a sentence with a prepositional phrase that describes where something is.
It describes a verb in which there is potential risk to something. For example, Drinking and driving is a risky move.
Definition by example
The word 'your' best describes you.'Your' refers to something belonging to you, or something which describes you, or something considered to be yours, such as your appearance, your home, your street, and so on. Someone might say: 'I like your face (hair, clothes, and so on)' or, 'Your city is great.''You're' means 'you are'; it's a short form, an abbreviation, a contraction of 'you are'. For example: 'I like the way you're doing that,'
No, "fake" is not an adverb. It is commonly used as an adjective to describe something that is not genuine or real.
"Easy" can be both an adjective and an adverb. As an adjective, it describes a noun and as an adverb, it describes a verb or an adjective. For example, "The exam was easy" (adjective) and "He completed the task easily" (adverb).