brotherly
An adjective modifies a noun. An adverb modifies a verb. "He gave his brother a firm push" (adjective) "He pushed his brother firmly" (adverb)
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.
The pronoun for you and your brother would be "we" when referring to both of you collectively. Individually, the pronouns would be "you" for the singular second person and "he" for the singular third person when referring to your brother.
No, it cannot be a preposition, which is a linking word (of, in, at, to). Brother is a noun and little is an adjective, creating a noun phrase for a younger male sibling.
The word 'gory' is the adjective form of the noun gore.The noun form of the adjective gory is goriness.
No, brotherhood (single compound word) is a singular, common, abstract noun, a word for a relationship between people, a concept.
The word reside is a verb (to live somewhere). "Her brother resides in Canada."
No, the word 'taller' is an adjective, a word that describes a noun; the comparative form for the adjective tall (taller, tallest). Example sentence:The taller sister is Megan; the tallest one is their brother Matt.
A predicate nominative or a predicate adjectiverestates a noun following a linking verb or the object of a verb, telling something about the noun. The word 'tall' could be a predicate adjective or a predicate noun, depending on how it's used in a sentence. Examples:Predicate nominative: The size I need is a tall. (the noun tall is renaming the noun size)Predicate adjective: My brother is very tall. (the adjective tall is renaming the noun brother)
He is the pronoun for brother; it is the pronoun for joke. The word your is an adjective form of the possessive pronoun 'yours'.
No, brother is a noun. When it is used with other nouns (brother trouble, brother officer), it is a noun adjunct, not an adjective. The related adjective "brotherly" can refer to relationships having characteristics of those between brothers, or it can refer to brotherhood (amicable and spiritual relationships) among people.
Brotherly