These are adjectives phrases starting with letter O.
obese Osang
obvious outcome
outrageous Owen
overriped orange
optimistic Obet
occasional order
overworked Ogie
ordinary oar
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The phrase equal adjectives applies when two or more adjectives, with different meanings, describe the same noun. eg The long, cool drink. Long and cool are equal adjectives as the both have equal importance in describing the drink.
Beautiful
Adjectives that already end in -l add -ly to form the adverb. For example economical: economically; dreadful: dreadfully
No, it is not. "Candidate" is a noun. Adjectives are words that describe nouns. For example, we might describe a candidate using the adjectives 'eligible', 'potential' or 'feasible'.
The book on the table is mine. The house with the red door is for sale. The girl in the blue dress won the contest. The man from New York is visiting next week.
A prepositional phrase consists of a preposition, its object, and any modifiers that come between them. The preposition shows the relationship between its object and another word in the sentence.
A conjunction connects words, for example, the word 'and' is a conjunction in the phrase 'apples and bananas'. An active describes another word, for example, the word 'red' is an adjective in the phrase 'the red ball'. This sentence has a conjunction and two adjectives: I saw a ship and a giant white whale. (Giant and white are both adjectives describing the whale.)
what are the example of basal adjectives
Example of detailed lesson on degrees of adjectives
This That These Those are some demonstrative adjectives
The adverb in the phrase "a tiny piece of garlic" is "tiny," as it describes the size of the piece of garlic.
Hazardous is the only adjective
Arizona is a noun. Thus, it satisfies conditions for being a minimal noun phrase. An extended noun phrase could include articles and/or adjectives, adverbs modifying the adjectives, or even complete clauses that assume the role of an adjective (or adverb).
They are ADJECTIVES.
'In the scented tropical breeze' is a prepositional phrase. It starts with the preposition 'in' and includes the words 'the scented tropical breeze' which act as the object of the preposition. It does not contain a subject and a verb, so it is not a clause.
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