An adjective tells: Which one, how many, and what kind.
Adjectives are parts of speech that describes a noun or pronoun. Adjectives are usually placed just before the words they describe.
Example:
1. The hairy dog has fleas. Hairy which is an adjective describes what kind of dog.
2. Ten cats are sleeping. Ten which is an adjective describes how many cats.
3. I want those shoes. Those which is a demonstrative adjective describes which shoes.
For more information on adjectives, please refer to the Related Question section below.
An adjective is a describing word.
Adjectives tell us Which, Whose, What Kind, and How Many.
They answer what happened which one and how many.
They tell us how, when, where.
what kind, how many, how much,
arlicle
exiting good suspence & drama
It has been predicted September 12, 2010.
You can use as many as you need, for example this sentence has 4 My oldest brother has a large fast Japanese car. adjectives = oldest large fast Japanese
funny, biblical, brave, adventurous, smart, kind....idk what else
helps us breathe
Clouds can tell us many things like the ones below. 1. Clouds tell us if any kind of precipitation is coming. 2. Clouds tell us if a cold front is coming through. 3. Clouds tell us when there is evaporation taking place. 4. Clouds are interesting to look at. Even on a sunny and bright day. Please feel free to improve my answer everyone.
4:06
We can't tell you unless you tell us what x is equal to.
arlicle
agrhhretj
no 4 things
Only if you tell us what you mean by "category 4".
Raccoons
What does the prologue (Luke 1:1-4) tell us about this author? How does it serve as an aid in understanding the Gospel of Luke?
wet, cool, calm, long
hot beautiful secret female