If there is a more dangerous shark than a great white, it is the bull shark.
Each new paroxysm will bear a more severe and dangerous character.
We need more information to answer this question.
A sentence with an adverb or adjective clause is a complex sentence, because an adjective clause is a subordinate clause. A complex sentence must contain one independent clause plus one or more subordinate clauses.
A sentence with an adverb or adjective clause is a complex sentence, because an adjective clause is a subordinate clause. A complex sentence must contain one independent clause plus one or more subordinate clauses.
if you are more safe you are saferif you are less safe you are dangerous/vulnerable
'more dangerous' is two words, ask the proper question to get the proper answer
A participial phrase functions in a sentence as an adjective, modifying a noun or pronoun. It provides more information about the noun or pronoun it is describing.
Since the word "dangerous" is considered a long adjective (of 3 or more syllables), the words "more" and "most" are used to form the comparative and superlative forms. The comparative form is more dangerous. The superlative form is most dangerous.
careful
He performed the task rather usefully! ( He did it well because he was skilled) The word useful is an adjective. Usefully is an adverb. The adjective can be converted to a noun by adding ness to it - usefulness which is used more commonly than the adverb.
The adjective in that sentence is "good". "Good" is the answer because an adjective is a descriptive word that modifies a noun. For example, if I say, "Johnny is handsome", the adjective would be "handsome" because I am describing Johnny as handsome. "A" is also an adjective. More specifically, it's an article, which falls under the "adjective" category.
No, "of the mountains highlands" is not an adjective phrase. It seems to be a prepositional phrase that describes a location or origin using the preposition "of" and the noun phrase "the mountains highlands." An adjective phrase modifies a noun or pronoun in a sentence, but this phrase functions more like a descriptor of a specific place.