Porcine describes pigs.
for good grief no! a verb tells you what the noun did or is doing or what will do a adjective describes things about the noun (like what color it is)
no an adjetive describes something else like a blue toy the adjective is blue
Porcine.
An adjective describes a noun. For example, in the sentence, "I would like that green lollipop, please," "green" is the adjective describing "lollipop."
It's Ungual
An adjective is a word that describes, identifies or further defines a noun or a pronoun. In the sentence 'I like playing games' there is no adjective to describe the noun or pronoun.
The word truly is an adverb. It means to do something honestly.
No, hystricine is an adjective, a word that describes a noun as like or pertaining to the porcupines.
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).
No, "when" is an adverb. If it were an adjective, you would hear such things as "I really like that when car."
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).
The word "windy" is always used as an adjective, because it alwasys describes something. For example: "That day yesterday was really windy." It describes the day that it was like yesterday(that day)