Monster is a noun. Monstrous would be the adjective.
scary
As a noun anghenfil or clobyn;as an adjective anferth.
Victor Frankenstein was the scientist, who created the monster. The monster is often called Frankenstein's monster, or simply Frankenstein.
The possessive form for the noun monster is monster's.Example: The monster's teeth were fearsome.
Monster is a noun.
As a noun, anghenfil (monster) or clamp (mass, lump; monster); as an adjective anferth (huge, monster).
scary
The black, terrifing monster ate the city.
As a noun anghenfil or clobyn;as an adjective anferth.
Freaky , chic and fly Monster High, where student bodies lie.
The proper adjective is "American," derived from the proper noun "America."
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No. It is a rather unusual hyphenated compound adjective. There may exist somewhere in fiction an actual nine-headed monster.
This is a four-metre table.My brother is a part-time worker.Don't go near the green-eyed monster.
It depends on how it is used. It can be an adjective meaning-having a heading or course.shaped or grown into a head.having the mentality, personality, emotional control, or quality specified, or possessing a specified number of heads (usually used in combination): a slow-headed student; a two-headed monster.
Yes, the pronoun "its" is a possessive adjectivedescribing the noun "head" as belonging to the subject of the sentence (monster).A possessive adjective is placed before a noun to describe that noun as belonging to someone or something in the sentence.The possessive adjectives are: my, your, his, her, their, its.
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