You are describing the drink. "Is" is a linking verb that connects the subject (drink) to the subject complement (red and frizzy).
Since hay is describing the way velvet feels and velvet is a noun, it must be an adjective since it is describing a noun.
Not if the narrative is describing present tense. That is, if the narrative is describing what is happening right now. However, if it is mixing the tense, then it would be wrong.
Well, you could say something describing a stereotype, then say "is a stereotype of" what ever the stereotype is. Or you could say something like "Jimmy sure is to the exact likeness of an American stereotype."
Crimson, scarlet, or maroon. Those are three different ways to say red in English.
It depends. If you're describing someone who is actually standing on a step or walking up or down the stairs, you would say "on the stairs". If a person were standing in front of the stairs, you could say "at the stairs" or "at the staircase".
It depends on context. If you are describing actual colours, such as red, blue, pink, etc., you might say, "hoka no iro" or "chigau iro" or even "tashoku" if you are describing certain kinds of gemstones.
You are describing its luster.
100% Cranberry Juice.... make sure the bottle doesn't say "juice cocktail" or "juice drink".. Healthy and Red :-)
its red wine and because shes talking about loosing memory when u drink.
i would say the worst energy drink that has the worst crash is red bull naw amn srry but it is one of our favs ROCKSTAR ORIGINAL
temperature...
if your describing a male - cansado if your describing a female - cansada if your describing a group of females - cansadas if your describing a group of males or a group of mixed sexes - cansados
I'd say, side bangs do, not front bangs though. I have side bangs and curly, sorta frizzy hair, and despite the frizziness, I think it looks nice.
No
temperature...
"Desordenado" in Spanish means disorganized or messy.
Drink