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To blobbler-- to do the thing that the wax in a lava lamp does.
The word 'these' is not an adjective. An adjective is something that describes a noun.
"What is your favorite color for a lava lamp?" "Beware the lava flow." "Doesn't lava cool into a beautiful rock?"
An adjective is a word that describes a noun.
An adjective is a word that describes a noun.
A word that describes a noun is an adjective
An adjective is a word that describes a noun. An adverb is a word that describes a verb, an adjective, or another adverb.
no. An adjective is a word that describes a noun.
An adjective is a word that describes a noun as in green. All is not an adjective.
The word "lamp" is a noun -- nouns are always either a person (David, teacher, Queen Elizabeth), a place (China, New York, Mount Everest) or a thing (book, house, lamp). To have an antonym, you usually need a different part of speech: an adjective. Adjectives describe (tell us more about) a noun or a pronoun. For example, "lamp" is a noun, but what kind of lamp? How about a "blue lamp" (blue is an adjective, describing the lamp). Or how about a "small lamp"? Or an "expensive lamp"?With adjectives, you can have synonyms or antonyms. A synonym is a word with the same meaning: "big" and "large" are synonyms. So are "small" and "little." But an antonym is a word that means the opposite-- "big" and "small" are antonyms. So are "old" and "new." You could only have an antonym if you described the lamp in opposite ways: "the old lamp" and the "new lamp" for example. But the word "lamp" would not be the antonym-- only the adjective (the word that describes it) would be the antonym you are looking for.
No, an adverb describes a verb or an adjective. An adjective is the word that describes a noun.
"Behind" is typically used in a prepositional phrase, as in "behind the lamp." A prepositional phrase can be used to describe things, nonetheless. "Your keys are behind the lamp." Behind the lamp tells where the keys are located."Behind" can also be used as an adjective on its own. "John fell behind." Behind describes where John fell.