adapting is like getting used to, but modifying is changing the environment based on your specific needs
False
False
It is totally wrong and unacceptable.
I ran really fast. She talked quite loudly. You talk extremely softly. They woke up unusually early.
The simple subject is "visitors". "Many" is an adjective modifying "visitors"
D. There is an adjective modifying both the subject and the object.
If the subject the verb is modifying is feminine, then there is an E placed after.
few" is an adjective. Yes, it is, because it modifies the noun (the noun, in your sentence, being "American".) "Americans" is the subject, because in the sentence, they're the ones doing the action, aren't they? "speak" is the verb, what is being done in that sentence…(what's being done by the subject: Americans) "fluent" is also an adjective. So the answer is not A because there is two adjectives, two words modifying the next word (few, modifying Americans and fluent, modifying French). This is a trick answer for people wondering if "few" is an adjective. The answer is not B either because we already know there're two adjectives. The answer is not C because the verb "speak" could not be an adjective. The answer D is the right one because an adjective is modifying both the subject and the object but it is again a trick question because it seems to imply that it is the same adjective when it's not: the adjective "few" is modifying the subject "Americans" and the adjective "fluent" is modifying the object "French". So the subject and the object are both modified by an adjective (just not the same one…).
The simple subject may have other words modifying it. For example in the following sentence 'dog' is the simple subject but 'The big black dog' is the complete subject. The big black dog chased the cat.
A.A Lindo has written: 'The injurious tendency of the modifying of our navigation laws' -- subject(s): Navigation
Mod. Is for modify. There's us no abbreviation for modifying.
Modifying verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs. - Modifying verb: "The girl ran quickly." - Modifying adjective: "The cake tasted extremely delicious." - Modifying adverb: "Julia ran extremely quickly."
As a child is the object phrase modifying piano you is the pronoun subject practiced is the verb piano is the direct object.
Increasing the temperature, adding catalysts, stirring, modifying the pH of the solution, modifying the the pressure, modifying the concentrations of the reactants, etc.
Amino acid compounds and lipids can be formed by modifying cholesterol.
suggest you narrow the question down a little. There are many, Adverbs of manner, place or location, time, degree. Adverbs modifying adjectives, modifying nouns, modifying noun phrases and modifying determiners, numerals and pronouns.