No. The word pair means two items, often of a similar kind. The word "paired" is one adjective form.
The adjective could be snake-infested. The rhyming pair is "reptile isle."
Parisians. (Pair-ree-zhee-uns)
In this sentence there are two adjectives and two nouns. The first pair is "lonely man." "Lonely" is the adjective describing the noun "man." The second pair is "dilapidated house," where the noun "house" is described by the adjective "dilapidated."
No, it is a pair of adverbs. The adverb soon modifies the adverb after, which will modify a verb.
No. The word pair is a noun, meaning a group of two. The word of is a preposition, and has a plural noun (socks, pants, pliers,scissors) as its object.
The word 'old' is an adjective, a word that describes a noun, for example an old story or an old pair of shoes.
The word 'quality' is both and adjective and a noun.Examples:It's a good investment to own at least one pair of quality shoes. (adjective)His best quality is his honesty. (noun)
The word 'pair' is both a noun (pair, pairs) and a verb (pair, pairs, pairing, paired).The noun 'pair' is a singular, common noun; a word for a set of two things used together or regarded as a unit (a pair of shoes); an article consisting of two joined or corresponding parts not used separately (a pair of scissors).The verb 'pair' means to put together or join to form a pair.
No, "neither" is a negative determiner or pronoun used in combination with "nor" to express a negative choice between two options. It is not a correlative conjunction like "either...or" or "both...and."
The likely word here is "binocular" (the adjective) and "binoculars" which is the singular and plural for a pair of joined telescopic devices.
The latin word "superior" is pronounced sooh-pair-ee-or which means "latter" (comparative adjective).