no because a verb describes what a noun is.
In this context, it is common.
In the sentence "The gorilla in the cage gave him a funny look," the complement is "a funny look." This phrase completes the meaning of the verb "gave" by specifying what the gorilla gave to him.
The statement 'Mon cage est fourre avec lumiere' means My cage is filled with light. In the word-by-word translation, the possessive adjective 'mon' means 'my'. The noun 'cage' means 'cage'. The verb 'est' means '[he/she/it] is'. The adjective, past participle 'fourre' means 'filled'. The preposition 'avec' means 'with'. And the noun 'lumiere' means 'light'.
When used as nouns numbers can be singular or plural. Seven is a lucky number. -- as a noun 'seven' is singular. Nine times nine is 81. -- same as above. Nine eights are 72 -- eight is plural so use a plural be verb. When numbers come before nouns (as determiners) then the verb can be singular or plural: Three monkeys always escape from their cage. or One monkey always escapes from his cage
The word 'trapped' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to 'trap'.The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.Examples:We trapped a rodent in the cage and released it in the woods. (verb)The trapped driver was angry that a truck had blocked his car. (adjective)The word 'trap' is also a noun (trap, traps).
No, it is a noun. If it is used with another noun (e.g. bird cage), it is technically a noun adjunct, not an adjective. (the word bird is also rarely a verb, meaning to go birding.)
An adverb phrase adds information about a verb, adjective, or adverb. It is used to tell when, where, how, or to what extent about the word it modifies:Jack put the chicken in it's cage. The adverb prepositional phrase ( in it's cage ) adds information to the verb put.Compare withJack is the student with the lowest grade. The adjective prepositional phrase ( with the lowest grade) modifies the noun student
The best cage is a small budgie cage.
The verb "peep" or "peeped' is often followed by "in" or "into", based on the noun/pronoun and verb tense. Example sentences: I wanted to just peep in the window and quietly leave. I peeped into the cage but feared waking the sleeping bear. He peeped into the room so he wouldn't wake his sleeping child.
A cage dancer is an erotic dancer who dances inside a cage, usually in a location such as a nightclub.
A cage fight is an individual duel in cage fighting - hand-to-hand combat in a usually steel cage.
you put the cage into a cage :D by abraham