The word 'creepy' is an adjective (creepy, creepier, creepiest), a word that describes a noun (a creepy house, a creepy story).
The verb form is to creep (creeps, creeping, crept).
The adverb form is creepily.
The noun form for the adjective creepy is creepiness. A related noun is a creep (creeps).
No. Only adjectives modify nouns and pronouns.
Problematic and problematical are the corresponding adjectives to the noun problem. The corresponding adverb is problematically.
There is a rare derivative adverb, appliably, as opposed to the well-known adverb applicably (related to the noun application). The participle adjectives applying and applied do not form adverbs.
Noun quantifiers are those words that precede a noun to modify that noun. They are:ARTICLESDefinite articles: the; used to identify a specific noun.Indefinite articles: a (used before a noun starting with a consonant sound), an (used before a noun starting with a vowel sound); used to identify a singular general noun.ADJECTIVESAn adjective describes or qualifies a noun (a big dog, a small dog); adjectives are used before the noun or after the verb (This is an easy subject. or This is hard.); two or more adjectives can be used together (a beautiful, young lady). There are hundreds of adjectives, some samples are: happy, sad, green, white, special, somber, chewy, dark, heavy, sweet, lucky, wonderful, etc.ATTRIBUTIVE NOUNSNouns used to describe other nouns (nouns used as adjectives), for example horse farm, house plant, vegetable broth, school books, shoe lace, ranch dressing on a house salad, etc.MODIFYING PRONOUNSPossessive adjectives: my, your, his, her, its, our, their.Demonstrative pronouns: this, that, these, those.Distributive pronouns: each, either, none, neither, etc.Numeral pronouns: some, any, few, many, none, all, etc.
The adjectives for the noun and verb scare are scary and scared. The related adverbs are scarily (in a scary manner) and scaredly (in a scared or frightened manner).
No. Only adjectives modify nouns and pronouns.
Creepy is an adjective--a creepy feeling.
Possibly is an adverb.
A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.An adjective is a word used to describe a noun.There are some pronouns that function as adjectives.The possessive adjectives are pronouns placed before a noun to describe that noun.The possessive adjective are: my, your, our, his, her, their, its.Other types of pronouns can also function as a pronoun or an adjective, for example the demonstrative pronouns and some of the indefinite pronouns.
The groups of pronoun adjectives are:POSSESSIVE ADJECTIVES, my, your, his, her, their, its.DEMONSTRATIVE PRONOUNS, this, that, these, those.DISTRIBUTIVE PRONOUNS, each, either, none, neither, etc.NUMERAL PRONOUNS, some, any, few, many, none, all, etc.
No, adjectives can be used to describe nouns, pronouns, and noun phrases.
Antecedents can be any noun (or noun form) where pronouns will replace the repetition of the noun. The most common pronouns that replace antecedents are personal pronouns (I, me, he, she, it, we they) or possessive adjectives (my, your, his, her, its) or possessive pronouns (his, hers, theirs, mine, yours).
Care is a noun and a verb. Caring and careful are adjectives. Carefully is an adverb.
The pronouns that describe nouns are the possessive adjectives: my, your, his, her, their, its.Example: How is your salmon? Mychicken is delicious.
An adjective is to a noun as an adverb is to a verb. Adjectives describe nouns. Adverbs add information to verbs.
An adjective is to a noun as an adverb is to a verb. Adjectives describe nouns. Adverbs add information to verbs.
Yes, adjectives describe nouns and pronouns.