Athletic
gel-filled.
'big' is the adjective in this sentence
It could be any of the three. Which it is in any given case depends on the rest of the sentence. "Genentech has a patent on that compound" - Noun. "Harvey was going to patent his invention" - Verb. "These shoes are patent leather" - Adjective.
K-Swiss athletic shoes
The noun slipper does not have an adjective: you would use the noun as a noun adjunct.*The word slippers (slip-on shoes) is not directly related to the adjective slippery.
gel-filled.
"Special" is the adjective in that sentence. It's describing the noun "shoes".
'big' is the adjective in this sentence
'The athletic shoes of the team member...' is not a sentence, it is a noun phrase. It contains no verb and it is an incomplete thought.There is no possessive noun is the noun clause 'The athletic shoes of the team member...'.To make the noun clause into a possessive noun clause, the noun must be changed to the possessive form:'The team member's athletic shoes...'A possessive noun shows possession by adding an apostrophe s ('s) to the end of the word; or in the case of a plural noun that already ends with s, just add an apostrophe after the ending s (s'):'The team members' athletic shoes...'
The pronoun in the sentence, "Put on your shoes." is your.The pronoun 'your' is a possessive adjective describing the noun 'shoes'.Another pronoun is the implied subject of the sentence you ("You put on your shoes.")The pronoun 'you' is the second person, personal pronoun.
I twisted my ankle this morning and it is so swollen I can not get my shoes on.
Etonic is a brand that manufactures a number of types of athletic shoes. Such types of athletic shoes include golf shoes, running shoes, and cross training shoes.
By definition the Nike lunarglide 1's are running shoes as they are designed for the sole purpose of running. An athletic shoe is a shoe designed for special athletic demands, such as basketball shoes need grip or hardwood floors, or track shoes.
athletic shoes ankle boots
Athletic shoes are made of flexible compounds, typically featuring a sole made of dense rubber.
Crazy is already the adjective. It describes shoes.
No, the word 'your' is a pronoun a possessive adjective, a word placed before a noun to describe that noun as belonging to someone or something.In the given sentence, the pronoun 'your' tells us the brother 'belongs' to you. His is also a possessive adjective, it tells the shoes belong to him (brother).The words 'brother' and 'shoes' are nouns, a word for a person and a word for things.