Possessive adjectives indicate belonging. The possessive adjectives are my, your, his, her, their, our, and whose.His bicycle is green.Whose car is that?
It can be, when used with nouns to indicate how many. Numbers can also be nouns and pronouns.
Yes, if it is used to indicate a number of objects. It can also be a noun and pronoun.
It can be considered an adjective when used to indicate a color (olive skin), or something made from olive tree wood. Olive as a noun can refer to the color, the tree, or the fruit of the olive tree.
The noun forms of the verb to signify are signifier, significance, and the gerund, signifying.
The past participle of the verb to indicate can be used as an adjective: indicated. There is also a related derivative adjective, indicative.
MeanMean as a noun is the average value of a set of numbers.Mean as an adjective is unkind.Mean as a verb is indicate or signify.
It may be either. As a cardinal number, 600 is a noun. Used before nouns to indicate quantity, it is an adjective.
No, it is a verb. Can is a modal (helper) verb that can function with verbs to indicate ability.
Possessive adjectives indicate belonging. The possessive adjectives are my, your, his, her, their, our, and whose.His bicycle is green.Whose car is that?
It can be, when used with nouns to indicate how many. Numbers can also be nouns and pronouns.
Yes, if it is used to indicate a number of objects. It can also be a noun and pronoun.
The spelling is great-uncle (hyphenated to indicate greatis not an adjective).
"Foremost" can be both an adjective and an adverb. As an adjective, it describes something or someone that is in the first or most important position. As an adverb, it modifies a verb or an adjective to indicate that something is the most important or prominent.
"Shorter" is an adjective, as it describes the comparative form of the adjective "short."
No, the word "about" can function as a preposition, adverb, or adjective. It is commonly used as a preposition to indicate location, movement, or relationship.
Yes. "Right" as a noun can indicate an inherent privilege: "The Right of Free Speech is part of the 1st Amendment." "Right" as an adjective can indicate a degree of correctness: "That is the right answer." Right has many meanings, and can be used as practically any form of speech in one of these meanings.