"latest" is the adjective in the sentence. It describes the noun "story."
I have downloaded the latest multimedia called Multimovie v.5.6
Later, Last or Latest. Comparative Adjective: Later. Superlative Adjective: Latest.
Yes, "latest" is an adjective used to describe something that is the most recent or up-to-date.
The word "latest" is an adjective. It is the superlative form of the adjective late. (It can also be considered a noun, e.g. Have you heard the latest?)
No, the word 'latest' is an adjective (late, later, latest), and a noun; for example:Adjective: You always know the latest fashions.Noun: The latest to arrive is Therese.
Collocations are combinations of words which are used together with greater than usual frequency : latest gossip adjective + noun package holiday noun + noun have a great time verb + adjective + noun discuss calmly verb + adverb completely satisfied adverb + adjective hand in an assignment verb + preposition + noun
latest poem.
has spoken of the wheel
The word 'later' is an adverb, used to modify a verb, an adjective, or another adverb.Example: The train arrived later than expected.The word 'later' is an adjective, the comparitive form of the adjective late (later, latest) used to describe a noun.Example: We will take a later train.
The conclusions are contained in the agency's latest report.This sentence is a passive sentence, a present simple passive sentence. The verb phrase is - are contained = be verb + past participle.Past perfect passive sentence:The conclusions had been contained in the agency's latest report.
The most likely way to make the noun audiophile into an adjective would be to use it as it is, for example, our publication gives the latest audiophile news.
'buy' is the verb.