No, not at all. You could say "her lovely smile", here the adjective is before the noun, but you could also say "her smile is lovely", now it is after.
Some adjectives can really only be used in the latter sense also, such as 'afraid'. You could say 'the girl was afraid' but not 'an afraid girl'.
There are even some adjectives that can be placed directly after the word they modify. 'Queen regnant', 'Devil incarnate', for example.
A verb is modified by an adverb or an adverbial phrase.
An adjective clause is the group of words that contain the subject and the verb acting as an adjective. An adverb clause answers questions like how, when and where.
adjective
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)
A relative clause modifies a noun or a pronoun. A relative clause is a group of words that includes a verb, but is not a complete sentence, that gives information about the noun or pronoun to which it relates. A relative clause is introduced by a relative pronoun. The relative pronouns are: who, whom, whose, which, that.EXAMPLESThe runner who finishes first will win the race. (the relative clause is 'who finishes first'; the relative pronoun 'who' realtes to the noun 'runner', modifying the noun as a specific runner)The one who finishes first will win the race. (the relative clause 'who finishes first' relates to the indefinite pronoun 'one')
yes
a dependent clause that modifies a noun
Anything that modifies a noun is an adjective even if it is also a subordinate clause.
It modifies a verb, adjective, or an adverb.
An adverb clause is a subordinate clause that modifies a verb, adjective, or adverb. A conjunction that begins an adverb clause is called a subordinating conjunction. It joins the clause to the rest of the sentence.
An adjective modifies a noun or a pronoun. (it can also modify a noun phrase or clause)
The clause "which are very dangerous" is a subordinate clause, adjective, that modifies "adventures."
An 'adverb clause' is a subordinate clause that modifies a verb, an adjective, or another adverb. It tells when, where, how, to what extent or under what conditions.
well for adjectives it must be a describing clause and for verb it must be a doing clause and for a adverb it must be a modifying clause
It is an adjective, Biogdegradable plastics, for example where it is used in the sense of a noun clause- Biodegradable modifies plastics.
An adverbial phrase. A word, phrase, or clause of a sentence has the aspect of an adverb if it modifies a verb. By the same token, a word, phrase, or clause of a sentence that modifies a noun would be an adjective, adjectivial phrase or adjectivial clause.
a word or an expression that modifies a verb, adjective, another adverb, determiner, clause, preposition, or sentence