Often is neither a verb nor an adjective. It's an adverb. Adverbs modify verbs, adjectives, and other adverbs. Adjectives describe nouns.
"New" is the adjective in the sentence. It describes the noun "employee."
The adjective in the sentence is "beautiful," which describes the noun "poem."
In this sentence, "cynical" is an adjective modifying the pronoun "she." It describes her attitude or behavior.
The word "cold" is the adjective in the sentence. It describes the type of wind that is blowing.
The compound word 'stay-at-home' is an adjective, a word that describes a noun. In a sentence like: My dad is a stay-at-home. The adjective is functioning as a subject complement (an adjective following a linking verb which restates, describes, the subject of the sentence).
there is no adjective in this sentence, an adjective describes a noun
An adjective describes a noun or pronoun.
There are three adjectives because an adjective describes a noun. Hot is an adjective because it describes sun, two is an adjective because it tells how many glasses you drank, and cold is an adjective because it describes water.
It's the word that describes the noun in the sentence.
False. A predicate adjective describes or modifies the subject of a sentence, typically following a linking verb, rather than renaming it. For example, in the sentence "The sky is blue," "blue" is the predicate adjective that describes the subject "the sky." Renaming the subject is the function of a predicate nominative, not a predicate adjective.
An adjective describes a noun.
The possessive pronoun being used as an adjective in the sentence is "her." It describes the noun "lunch" to show that it belongs to Amanda.