our, egyptian, our, muddy, the
Our is not an adjective it is a pronoun, a possessive pronoun
The adjectives used in the sentence are, in bold:
Our Egyptian friend, Abdul, asked us to remove our muddy shoes at the door.
our, egyptian, our, muddy, the
Our is not an adjective it is a pronoun, a possessive pronoun
There are two adjectives in the sentence "Our Egyptian friend Abdul asked us to remove our muddy shoes at the door." They are "Egyptian" and "muddy."
Occasionally, you will discover that the same word appears twice in a sentence, one next to the other. For example:When you do that, that creates confusion for the students.In that example, the two occurrences of the word are separated by a comma. As well, you may want to recast the sentence to remove one of the occurrences -- you could describe the first 'that' with an action verb, as an example. When you mishandle class discipline, that creates confusion for the students.Sometimes, you pile on too many adjectives to describe a noun. For example:The snow-laden, newly-planted cedar tree collapsed during the harsh winter.In this case, you can eliminate the least useful adjectives, or recast the sentence and expand it to more than one. Also, note that the hyphenated adjectives are separated by a comma.
To take away or take off (Remove your shoes) or delete (Remove that word from your sentence)
i am too week to run
The subject is you understood. The verb is remove.
"Sandblasting is used to abrade the surface and remove any rust."
The adjectives used in the sentence are, in bold:Our Egyptian friend, Abdul, asked us to remove our muddy shoes at the door.
you put a line through it !?! - or get rid of unnecessary words or information that cause your sentences to drone on. Too many adjectives can also cause this.
Remove him/her from your friend's list then
They pulled it out through the nose with a hook
The building destructors had to remove the plant because because it was blocking the exit.My friend Sally and I were painting our nails until we messed up then, we had to get the nail polish remover to remove our nail polish mess.Jim asked his teacher if he had to remove his jacket before taking school pictures.
please answer this someone
You can use an underscore to remove a word out of a sentence. It can be placed where the word was.
Go to your friends list.select the bad friend. Click on the remove friend
The Facebook can delete her/him from facebook if he/she has been reported few times. You can remove a friend from your friends list by going to a friend's page and at bottom left corner there's a Remove button.
You can't remove your friends restaurant from your street unless you reomve the friend itself. If it is a friend that works for you that you want to remove, click on them and press 'SACK'. You will have to give them two-hundred coins.
Occasionally, you will discover that the same word appears twice in a sentence, one next to the other. For example:When you do that, that creates confusion for the students.In that example, the two occurrences of the word are separated by a comma. As well, you may want to recast the sentence to remove one of the occurrences -- you could describe the first 'that' with an action verb, as an example. When you mishandle class discipline, that creates confusion for the students.Sometimes, you pile on too many adjectives to describe a noun. For example:The snow-laden, newly-planted cedar tree collapsed during the harsh winter.In this case, you can eliminate the least useful adjectives, or recast the sentence and expand it to more than one. Also, note that the hyphenated adjectives are separated by a comma.
You just double click on your friend when you see them and select 'remove friend' or get out your friend's list (which is the box at the top of the screen with three people in) and find your friend's name then click on it and select remove friend. Simple really :).