Old; because adjectives are words that describe the nouns, which in this case is the man.
old
The adjective 'out of order' is where there is a noun being modified and a comma is inseted after the noun. EX: the man, grizzled and old (no second noun) Example: The baby alligators, small and weak, ride on their mommas head.
The noun 'old' is an abstract noun as a word for an earlier time (days of old); a word for a concept.The noun 'old' is a concrete noun as a word for people who are old in general (enjoyed by young and old); a word for physical people.The word 'old' is also an adjective: old, older, oldest.
The word "erstwhile" is an adjective. An example of a sentence using the word would be: The erstwhile hero of the town was now a bitter old man.
No, it's an adjective.
The smelly old man shuffed along. The word old was already an adjective in your sentence. An adjective is a word that describes a noun. The noun being Man, and he is described as old and now Smelly.
No, "old" is not an adverb. It is an adjective that describes the age of a person or thing.
old
No, the word "old" is not a noun. It is an adjective used to describe the age of a person or thing.
No, it is not a preposition. It is an adjective, meaning aged, or previous (the old manual).
jaded
he is a ghost along with a girl and an old woman who have apperently died
You don't get a map from the old man, you get a map inside of your pokegear, along with a phone and radio.
Old means not new, it is an adjective used to describe a noun:The old man wore an old, shabby coat and old, scuffed shoes and cheerful smile.
The old man walked slowly around his house. It is an adjective and can be used in front of almost every noun.
First sentence:The man is poor and contented. has no error.poor is an adjective to the noun manand is a conjunctioncontented is adjective to the noun man (similar to content)There is no syntactic error as both poor and contented are adjective qualities for the man in the sentence.The second sentence : The man is poor contented is syntactically correct as the poor is a quality of the adjective contented to negate it to mean 'not much' contented.
No, it is an adjective. The adverb form is "untidily." Example: In the entrance was an untidily dressed old man carrying a knapsack.