wadddadwa
The informal (slang) adjective "street smart" is two words, but may be seen hyphenated when used as a direct adjective. Example: "They convinced the street-smart kid to help them."
Noun or adjective. Example as noun: Two of my best paintings were stolen. Example as adjective: You may eat only two pieces.
compound
Well, a lot is actually two words. The word "a" is an adjective and the word lot could be an adjective the way you use it. The words "a lot" are actually informal substations for the words many and much.
Example of a noun plus a noun equals a noun:four + two = six (words for numbers are nouns)
back stabber, for example. Simply put, two words which together modify a noun, though neither is an adjective.
The informal (slang) adjective "street smart" is two words, but may be seen hyphenated when used as a direct adjective. Example: "They convinced the street-smart kid to help them."
No, two is a number: an adjective or a noun. But the homophone 'to' is a preposition. Example: Give the completed test to the teacher. "To" is your preposition. "Teacher" is the object of the preposition.
Noun or adjective. Example as noun: Two of my best paintings were stolen. Example as adjective: You may eat only two pieces.
Two words. "junk" as the adjective.
A compound word is a word made up of two different words put together such as newspaper or bedtime.
Noun or adjective. Example as noun: Two of my best paintings were stolen. Example as adjective: You may eat only two pieces.
Adjectives? Well, they're descriptive words. Like beautiful, nice, soft or terrible. :>
A descriptive adjective
Adjective and adverb.
compound
compound