No, pile is a verb and a noun.
verb: The nets were loosely piled on the Vancouver Island pier.
noun: Take care not to trip over the pile of nets.
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One
The word rapidly is an adjective. no
The word very is an adverb.
The word either can be an adjective. Another word to use is whichever.
Disdainfully is the predicate adjective. The adjective describes how Jerry looks at the pile of laundry and who can blame him.
D. Jerry looks distainfully at the pile of laundry.Distainfully describes the predicate.B. jerry looks ill today
a) Pile: heap, mound b) Pile: villiform structure, fuzz
A word that rhymes with "leap" and "large pile" is "creep."
Yes, the word 'pile' is a long I word. Some other words with the same long I sound are pine and mile.
The word left by The Lorax by a small pile of rocks was "UNLESS."
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The word 'these' is not an adjective. An adjective is something that describes a noun.
A predicate adjective is a term for an adjective that comes after a linking verb rather than before a noun. Out of these choices, the sentence, "Jerry looks ill today," uses a predicate adjective.
heap
It is an adjective.It is a an adjective.
A word is a thing. The word 'word' is a noun.