Intensive Adjective - are used for emphasis.
Ex. The very person I trusted deceived me.
1) Idaho Central Credit Union 2) Intensive Cardiac-Care Unit 3) Intensive Coronary Care Unit
The personal pronoun for house is it.The possessive pronoun/possessive adjective is its (no apostrophe).The reflexive/intensive pronoun is itself.Examples:My house is on the corner. It has a red door. (personal pronoun)My house is on the corner, its door is red. (possessive adjective)The house itself sits on a corner. (intensive pronoun)
Intensive reading is reading with specific learning goals and tasks in mind. An example of intensive reading is: skimming a text for specific information in order to answer questions about the text.
The pronoun 'ourselves' can be reflexive or intensive depending on use.A reflexive pronoun 'reflects back' to its antecedent.An intensive pronoun emphasizes its antecedent.The reflexive/intensive pronouns are: myself, yourself, himself, herself, itself, ourselves, yourselves, themselves.Example functions:After a few hours, we gave ourselves a break. (reflexive)We did all the work ourselves. (intensive)
intensive
Yes. Adjectives are used to describe nouns in a sentence, the word intensive serves this purpose, as opposed to its noun form intensity. Example: The professor taught several intensive Political Science courses. In this sentence, intensive describes the noun "courses."
Intensive Property
The second person (the one spoken to) pronouns are:personal pronoun: youpossessive pronoun: yourspossessive adjective: yourreflexive/intensive pronoun: yourself
intensive property
chemical. Corrosion is a chemical reaction with the chemicals in the air.
Melting point is an intensive propery because doesn't depend on the mass of sample.
noun, verb, adjective, adverb, auciliary, preposition, determiner, conjunction, pronoun, interrogative, intensive, unnamed class
Intensive, it sinks because of its density-which is intensive.
intensive property
Intensive
Intensive
intensive