There is no actual adjective in the sentence. The noun "math" (mathematics) comes before the noun "book" but this is called a noun adjunct or attributive noun, rather than an adjective, which would describe a characteristic of the book (large, new, thick).
There is no adjective in the sentence.The word math is a noun, a short form for mathematics, used to describe another noun. This is called an attributive noun (a noun that modifies another noun and functions as an adjective). The term math book can also be considered a compound noun.
The noun mathematics has the adjective form mathematical. The word "math" (used as a shortened form of the noun) is also used as a noun adjunct in terms such as math problem and math textbook.*The British shortened version is maths.
In "What are Robert and Sam writing in their math journal?" their is a possessive adjective and "math journal" is a noun phrase. You could could argue that math is an adjective if it were short for "mathematical".
A demonstrative pronoun replaces a noun, while a demonstrative adjective modifies a noun. For example, in the sentence "This is my book," "this" is a demonstrative pronoun replacing the noun "book," and in the sentence "I want that book," "that" is a demonstrative adjective modifying the noun "book."
"Tricky" can be either an adjective or a noun. As an adjective, it describes something that is difficult or complicated. For example, "The math problem was tricky." As a noun, "tricky" refers to a person who is cunning or deceitful. For example, "He is a tricky character."
No, he is a personal pronoun that takes the place of a noun for a male person as the subject of a sentence; the corresponding objective pronoun is him.The possessive case consists of two uses of the possessive form his:A possessive pronoun takes the place of a noun that belongs to someone or something; for example: John left a math book in the lunch room. This book must be his.A possessive adjective describes a noun as belonging to someone or something; the possessive adjective comes just before the noun it describes; for example: John left a math book in the lunch room. This must be his book.
The noun 'book' is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a thing.The word 'book' is also a verb and an adjective.
Reading can be a verb a noun or adjective. verb -- I am reading a good book. noun -- I like reading. adjective -- Have you seen my reading glasses?
The word his is a pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence; his is a possessive pronoun that show something belongs to a male person. The word his is also an adjective, a word that describes a noun. Example:Possessive pronoun: Jim lost a math book, this one must be his.Adjective: Jim lost his math book.See the link below for the difference between the pronoun and the adjective.
The word 'book' is a noun, a verb, and an adjective.The adjective 'book' describes a noun as relating or pertaining to books (book salesman); knowledge learned from books rather than actual experience (book education); shown on a ledger (book assets).
Read is not an adjective. Read is a verb and sometimes a noun Verb: You read a good book. Noun: The book was a good read.