sisterly
It can be a verb, e.g., "He terrorised his sister" or it can be an adjective, e.g., "They discovered a terrorised community".
I married his youngest sister pronouns -- I , his verb -- married adjective -- youngest noun -- sister
If you wanted to speak of brotherly/sisterly sentiments in French, the adjective "fraternel / fraternelle" would be used. They come from the Latin word fratria used to speak of siblings (boys and girls alike).Technically, a French adjective related to the word "soeur" (sister) is the word "sororel" which shares the same roots as "sister" or "sorority". Absolutely nobody will understand it.
Usually yes, but it can be used as an adjective.
Being a sister. That's all. There is no adjective of sister.
You say "My little sister always has vitality in her attitude"
yes
In French, you would say "ma soeur préférée" to mean "my favorite sister." The possessive adjective "ma" (my) agrees in gender with the feminine noun "soeur" (sister). The adjective "préférée" (favorite) also agrees in gender and number with the noun it describes.
No, "half sister" is not hyphenated. It is considered a compound noun and is typically written as two separate words. However, "half-sister" is hyphenated when used as a compound adjective before a noun, such as "my half-sister's birthday."
The verb that joins a subject to a predicate noun or a predicate adjective is called a linking verb.A linking verb is a verb that acts as an equal sign, the subject is or becomes the object.A predicate noun or a predicate adjective is a subject complement.Example subject complements:Mary is my sister. (Mary = sister, predicate noun)Mary's feet got wet. (feet = wet, predicate adjective)
There is no predicate adjective in that sentence. In order for a sentence to have a predicate adjective, the verb must be a linking verb. Example: Mary is happy. ("is" is a linking verb, and "happy" is a predicate adjective) In the sentence "Your sister Mary teaches math and physical education at the high school", the verb (teaches) is transitive (a type of action verb that takes a direct object).
A predicate noun and a predicate adjective are both called a subject complement.The predicate noun (also called a predicate nominative) is the noun or a pronoun following a linking verb that restates or stands for the subject.The predicate adjective (also called a subject complement) is the adjective following a linking verb which modifies (describes) the subject of the sentence.Examples:Mary is my sister. (the predicate noun 'sister' restates the subject 'Mary')Mary's feet got wet. (the predicate adjective 'wet' describes the subject 'feet')