The term "relative adjective" can refer to the "relative pronouns" that introduce adjective clauses. These are who/whom, whoever/whomever, whose, that, and which (and in some circumstances when, where, or what). For example, the adjective clause in "That is the car that I saw."
Yes, it is a common noun. It can also be an adjective.
No, there are many sentences that have no nouns at all or just a proper noun.Examples:How are you? I am fine. ('how' is an adverb; 'you' is a pronoun; 'I' is a pronoun; 'fine' is an adjective)I think that Paris is beautiful. (the subject of the sentence is a pronoun; the subject of the relative clause is a proper noun; the object of the verb 'is' is an adjective)
an adjective
adjective
Dry, drier, driest. Adjective, comparative adjective, superlative adjective.
Relative is a noun, adjective or adverb
Words used to describe a relative location are adjectives or adverbs. The word relative is an adjective that describes the noun location.a near relative location (adverb)an very relative location (adverb)a popular relative location (adjective)a distant relative location (adjective)
A relative clause is also called an adjective clause because it describes the antecedent noun or pronoun.A relative pronoun is used to introduce an adjective clause:The cookies that mom made are for the bake sale. (mom is the subject of the adjective clause)A relative pronoun is used as the subject of the adjective clause: My car which is new was hit in the parking lot. (which is the subject of the adjective clause)
The word 'relative' is both a noun (relative, relatives) and an adjective (relative, more relative, most relative).The noun 'relative' is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for someone related by blood or marriage; in grammar, a relative pronoun, determiner, or adverb; a word for a person or a thing.The noun form of the adjective 'relative' is relativeness.
When talking about someone who is a relation, relative is a concrete noun. Relative can be a common noun and an adjective.
begins with a relative pronoun (who, whose, whom, which, that) or a relative adverb (when, where)
Relative pronouns are clue words for adjective clauses.
An adjective clause begins with a relative pronoun, such as who, whom, whose, which, that, when, or where.
No, which is an interrogative pronoun, a relative pronoun, and an adjective.
an adjective clause.
"when" is ADVERB (interrogative & relative).
Pakistani is the proper adjective for Pakistan.