In addition to adjectives, articles also describe nouns. The articles are a, an, and the.
A predicate is the verb and the words that relate to that verb. The words that describe the verb are adverbs; adjectives and articles describe nouns that are included in a predicate. Examples:
A dog ran past us. (the article 'a' describes the dog as any dog; the adverb 'past' describes where the dog ran)
The dog ran fast. (the article 'the' describes the dog as a specific dog; the adverb 'fast' describes how the dog ran)
An angry dog barked loudly last night. (the article 'an' describes the dog as any dog; the adjective 'angry' describes the mood of the dog) (the complete predicate is 'barked loudly last night'; the adverb 'loudly' describes how the dog barked; the adjective 'last' describes the noun 'night')
Another group of words that describe nouns are pronoun determiners. The pronoun determiners are: Possessive adjectives: my, your, his, her, their, its.
Demonstrative pronouns: this, that, these, those.
Numeral pronouns: some, any, few, many, none, all.
Distributive pronouns:each, either, none, neither.
No, nouns can also have antonyms: day/night, light/darkness,...
Unless I am mistaken, there are only 8 parts of speech: Nouns Pronouns Adjectives Adverbs Interjections Conjunctions Verbs Prepositions
No. You can only use adjectives in Super Scribblenauts. Sorry!
An article is only one of the words "the", "a" or "an". These words are not adjectives because they cannot without loss of sense replace adjectives in all attributive contexts: for example, "the red box" cannot be changed to "the the box". The articles appear only before common nouns in Received English and must precede adjectives: "box the red" is parsed by English listeners and readers not as "the red box" but as "boxing" the red. Like adjectives, the articles are dependent words. If the word they modify is removed they have no place. But they are different from adjectives. cf Sydney Greenbaum, OXFORD REFERENCE GRAMMAR, oup 2000. "The definite and indefinite articles are determiners." "Determiners introduce noun phrases".
Emphasizing adjectives are modifiers which, unlike prototypical or central adjectives, do not describe a property of the head noun, but which convey strong speaker feelings toward the entity referred to. Examples sheer madness or whole acres of land. The refer not only to the head noun but the phrase and infer a feeling of the speaker which makes them more than just descriptors of the noun, but descriptors of the speaker. Also they can't be intensified in anyway like very sheer madness or very whole acres of land, both of these don't make sense.
No, adjectives can be used to describe nouns, pronouns, and noun phrases.
No. Only adjectives modify nouns and pronouns.
"Every" is a singular word that is used to refer to each individual in a group. It is followed by a singular noun and a singular verb.
There are no adverbs about kit kats, since they are nouns. Adverbs only describe verbs. If you are talking about adjectives, which describe nouns, here are some examples: crunchy tasty chocolaty yummy
Extremely is an adverb. Adjectives can only describe nouns, and no noun is described as being extremely.
The word "perform" can't have an adjective. Adjectives only modify nouns, and perform is a verb. And adverbs and adjectives are usually the only parts of speech that can transition. Because a verb that describes an action( run, cook, play are some examples), it suddenly describe the noun.
There are no antonyms to nouns, only antonyms to adverbs and adjectives.
No, adjective clauses modify nouns. The only things adjectives modify are nouns and pronouns.
No, an adverb typically modifies a verb, adjective, or another adverb by providing information on how, when, where, or to what extent an action is performed. Nouns are typically modified by adjectives, articles, or other nouns.
Adverbs for me only describe 2 thing they describe verbs and adjectives.
No. Adjectives are normally undeclinable. They may take a plural form only when used as nouns, as in the sentence: The reds outnumber the blues.
Television and family are the only adjectives in the sentence. There are no proper adjectives.