In the sentence Then they add flour and some salt,the adjective is some
The adjective is 'marine'.
An adjective is a word that best describes the salt; for example much salt, little salt, or some salt.
Yes, many adjective are formed from nouns.Examples of adjective forms of nouns:noun = love; adjective = lovely, loveless, lovablenoun = mood; adjective = moodynoun = hope; adjective = hopefulnoun = quiz; adjective = quizzicalnoun = beef; adjective = beefyThere are nouns that are also adjectives.Examples of nouns that are also adjectives:noun = dark blue; adjective = blue skynoun = early winter; adjective = winter stormnoun = table salt; adjective = salt porknoun = plate glass; adjective = glass beads
Shaking is a Verb. Example: I am shaking the salt out of the salt shaker.
These is the adjective.
"Thicker" is not an adjective that makes sense in this context.
"Ocean water has more salt than fresh water."
No, "salty" is an adjective. It describes the taste or flavor of something that has a high concentration of salt.
An adjective gives information about a noun so that it can be identified, specified, or located.Examples:The tall man came in. (which man)The black dog is friendly.The boy is talkative. (characteristic)The neighbors are away. (status)
Saline is an adjective and a noun. If I'm asked what i put on my contact lens, I say saline (adjective)solution. The noun is used less often. "Saline is a metallic salt".
"Salt point" is a literal English equivalent of the French phrase point saline. The masculine singular noun and adjective also translate into English as "salt stage" according to context. The pronunciation will be "pwa sa-leen" in French.