Nouns don't describe things; adjectives describe.
That's it water.
You can make it more exact by adding an adjective to describe the noun eg
dirty water
chlorinated water
salt water
tap water
etc
A noun is a word that represents a person, place, thing, or idea. Nouns can be concrete (physical objects) or abstract (ideas or concepts) and are typically used as subjects, objects, or complements in sentences.
An adjective describes a verb, and an adverb describes a noun
A word that describes a noun is an adjective
No. An adjective describes a noun and an adverb describes a verb.
A noun that describes an arctic fox is mammal.
No, an adverb describes a verb or an adjective. An adjective is the word that describes a noun.
No, it's an adjective. It DESCRIBES what a NOUN is.
it is a adj. it describes a noun like the noun is dog the adj. is playfulness While an adjective describes a noun (the DOG is PLAYFUL), an adverb describes a verb (the dog BARKED PLAYFULLY).
Adjectives modify nouns. Adverbs modify verbs.
An adjective describes a noun. noun = dog adjective = black / big / smelly a big black smelly dog
The noun that describes the noun-pronoun agreement is "agreement".
No, bespectacled is an adjective, a word that describes a noun.