In Spanish the adjective follows the noun it modifies, so it is already in the correct position. The English version has the adjective first.
The sentence is still wrong because the object (Padre) should follow the transitive verb as the indirect object :
"Yo dio mi padre un abrazo carinoso." = "I gave my father a warm hug."
That is the correct spelling of "placing" (putting into a place or position, placement).* The noun form may be used to indicate ordinals (e.g. placing first, first place).
Yes
Someone suffering from abdominal pain, what would you do elevation of the head? Placing a bolster under the knees or placing the person in the prone position?
"Set" is used for placing something down or fixing it in place. "Sat" is the past tense of "sit" when referring to someone being in a seated position. "Sit" is used to indicate the action of lowering oneself into a seated position.
2.043 (correct to 3 decimal placing)
Set would be grammatically correct.
Yes, head mistress the correct grammar. However it can be completed by placing something before or after.
The number of significant figures in 0.00532 is 5; the 5 to the right of the point. The zeros are significant because they put the figures 532 in their correct positions. The number of sig figs in 4.0009 is 5 because every digit, no matter its position, is ensuring the correct placing of the digits.
positioning, placing, arrangement, position, deployment, location, disposition
Placing a question mark at the end of some words does not make a correct question.
Before placing it on the bottle. The initials are merely to verify that the data is correct.
No. Affluently is an adverb. Adverbs are denoted by the usual presence of "ly" at the end of the word. Adjectives can be identified by placing the word in front of a noun. For example, the adjective "corrupt". Does a "corrupt" man seem appropriate? If so, it is an adjective. Does an "affluently" man sound appropriate? No. :)