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Adjective
No, the word 'macabre' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun as disturbing and horrifying or having death as a subject.Example: Stephen King is famous for his macabrestories.
The word macabre means that a horrible thing has happened and has resulted in the death of someone. A good sentence would be, the macabre was unbelievable when the public found out the girl was murdered.
The independent clause is "Edgar Allan Poe was an American author"
It's a more impressive way of saying "kind of gross" or "kind of scary." Here is the dictionary definition of "macabre," if that helps: http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/macabre Obviously it's difficult as there no context. How about "almost gruesome"?
Adjective
No, the word 'macabre' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun as disturbing and horrifying or having death as a subject.Example: Stephen King is famous for his macabrestories.
The word macabre means that a horrible thing has happened and has resulted in the death of someone. A good sentence would be, the macabre was unbelievable when the public found out the girl was murdered.
No. It is an adjective clause, as it begins with a relative pronoun (who).
Into the Macabre was created in 1987.
The independent clause "Who wrote the gothic and macabre short stories" is an adjective clause because it modifies the noun "stories" by providing more information about them. It describes which stories are being referred to by specifying the author.
The body had a macabre appearance.He likes macabre movies, the bloodier, the better.
Macabre movies make me frightened.
His macabre humor sickened me.
Macabre Sunsets was created in 1994.
Dansen Macabre was created in 1980.
Macabre - band - was created in 1985.