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No: "favorite" in the sentence given is a noun, specifically a predicate noun, as indicated by its possessive pronoun/functional adjective modifier "your"
Basically neps is a problem of yarn but it may be a ornamented yarn if it can be arranged in a organized way. As for example: (95%Cotton+5%Polyester) Neppy Yarn Base yarn is cotton & if some dyed polyester of different color can be sprayed throught its length & base yarn is dyed then one kind of neppy effect will be visible throughout the length of the yarn. This yarn is called Neppy Yarn.
The only way to answer your question is for you to knit a samplegauge of the yarn you want to use, and then convert the pattern given the differences between your gauge and the gauge stated for the bulky yarn.
One knits with polyester yarn in much the same way that one knits with any other type of yarn.
If an Australian is telling you a "yarn", he is telling you a story, either real or fictional. It could also mean that he may be exaggerating the truth in a colourful way, ie. "he tells yarns" or "he spins a yarn".
A yarn. Hence- "spun".
Is there any particular reason that you want to carry the yarn behind your crochet work? Why not crochet the carried yarn into the top of the previous row? That way you wouldn't have to cut the yarn. Check out the attached videos to see how it can be done. (although one is hard to see really easily, as the green yarn is being carried on the green stitches below)
No way
It appears that there is no readily available answer to this specific yarn (Unger's Roxanne). The reason is that Unger's went out of business, got bought out by another company, or another reason. One way to figure out what the yarn weight of a ball of yarn would be to knit a stockinette gauge swatch, (or a crochet gauge swatch), then by counting the stitches, for four inches, and dividing by 4, you get an average stitches per inch. From there find your yarn weight at the Yarn Council recommended standards to get a guess at the yarn weight, ---Otherwise, take the yarn to your local yarn shop and see what weight they guesstimate for you <--this is probably your best bet at finding your yarn weight and information, btw
yes
Old fashioned way of saying a 'happy story'
Yarn is an irregular plural so plural for yarn is yarn. It can be singular or plural.