Sales can be both singular and plural. Sales when referring to multiple transactions is plural but when used as a description of employment, i.e., I work in sales - it is singular.
Sales is the plural of sale.
Sale is one syllable: sale.
verb
A relative clause is also called an adjective clause because it describes the antecedent noun or pronoun.A relative pronoun is used to introduce an adjective clause:The cookies that mom made are for the bake sale. (mom is the subject of the adjective clause)A relative pronoun is used as the subject of the adjective clause: My car which is new was hit in the parking lot. (which is the subject of the adjective clause)
The word seed is a noun, a verb, and an adjective (not an adverb). Example uses: Noun: The seed I wanted is on sale at the nursery. Verb: The conditions are perfect to seed the garden today. Adjective: The university is providing the seed money to start the research.
No. It is not an adjective. An adjective describes something.
Yes, it is an adjective.
No it's not a adjective, an adjective is a describing word.
An Adjective starting with the letter 'N' to describe jewelry is, nice.EXAMPLE: The nice jewelry was on sale.
A relative clause is also called an adjective clause because it describes the antecedent noun or pronoun.A relative pronoun is used to introduce an adjective clause:The cookies that mom made are for the bake sale. (mom is the subject of the adjective clause)A relative pronoun is used as the subject of the adjective clause: My car which is new was hit in the parking lot. (which is the subject of the adjective clause)
Organic is a noun when used as a thing that is made from ingredients from an animal or vegetable source. It is also an adjective to describe a thing made from those ingredients. Examples:As a noun: The organic is the preferred fertilizer for a vegetable garden.As an adjective: My favorite organic shampoo is on sale.
Yes, the word 'dry' is a noun, a word for a person who opposes the use and sale of alcohol; a prohibitionist. The word 'dry' is most commonly an adjective, a word that describes a noun (dry weather, dry laundry). The noun form for the adjective dry is dryness.
The word seed is a noun, a verb, and an adjective (not an adverb). Example uses: Noun: The seed I wanted is on sale at the nursery. Verb: The conditions are perfect to seed the garden today. Adjective: The university is providing the seed money to start the research.
It depends on the context. If a sentence says, "We bought strawberries on sale," strawberries is a noun. If strawberry or strawberries is used in front of a noun, for example strawberry pie, strawberry blonde, strawberry ice cream, then strawberry modifies the nouns of pie, blonde, and cream. Therefore, it is an adjective.
Antiquities is a noun. The adjective form is antique (which is also a noun). Examples:Noun: The antiquities of the native people should be returned to their care.Adjective: My mother gave me her antique rocking chair.Noun: When I purchased this item at the tag sale I had no idea that it was an antique.The word antiquities is sometimes used as an adjective, for example Antiquities Dept. or Antiquities Curator, but the word is most often a noun.
No, it is a noun, or a verb (to book passage, to book a suspect). But it is widely used as an adjunct, e.g. book sale, book bag, book signing.
Antique is a noun, adjective and verb; for example:Noun: The chair is an antique, it belonged to my great grandmother.Adjective: This antique broach is more than I can afford.Verb: We can antique this shabby chest of drawers to give it some character.
No, not formally. It is usually an adjective, meaning exceptional or uncommon (e.g. special materials). It can also be a noun for a sale item, or a non-series TV show. *In New Zealand, it is used informally as a verb to mean featuring a retail item, as at a reduced price.
"Thermos is a brand name (adjective) not a noun. Brand names are always used as an adjective so the correct usage in a sentence would be "I bought ten Thermos containers." or "The Thermos food containers are on sale at the store this week."
Nouns like "picture" can have functions like adjectives in some cases. For example, in the phrase "a picture book" or "a picture gallery" it modifies the following noun. If used often enough in this way, the noun will become an adjective.