It makes it more specific, so the person reading it can get a better picture in their head of what you're trying to say.
Yes, adverbs can modify adjectives.
adverb
In the sentence "It was quite late for a telephone call," the word "quite" is an adverb used to modify the adjective "late."
Yes, the word 'too' is an adverb, a word to modify a verb or an adjective.
Yes, the word 'idoneous; is an adjective used to modify a noun as fit, appropriate, suitable, or proper.The adjective 'idoneous' is an idoneous adjective to modify the noun 'resource'.Example use:What do you suggest as an idoneous resource for first person accounts of the Civil War?
No. If a word modifies a verb, it would be an adverb.
To modify a 'verb' the clue is in the name of the qualifying word , viz. 'AD**VERB**'.
No. The word "at" is a preposition. It cannot modify a noun or pronoun by itself.
No, adjective clauses modify nouns. The only things adjectives modify are nouns and pronouns.
A describing word is called an adjective. Adjectives are used to modify or describe nouns or pronouns in a sentence.
The word 'dominantly' is the adverb form of the adjective dominant.An adverb is a word used to modify a verb, an adjective, or another adverb.The word 'dominant' is an adjective and a noun.The verb form is to 'dominate'.
Adjectives are modifying words. Your word doesn't modify anything.