Adjectives ask these questions: which one, what kind, how many, how much, whose.
Who, what, when, where, how, and why are not adjectives. Who is a pronoun and the rest are adverbs.
We love to answer questions but it is up to you to ask them.
An adjective clause is the group of words that contain the subject and the verb acting as an adjective. An adverb clause answers questions like how, when and where.
No, the adjective 'unusual' is a common adjective. A proper adjective is an adjective derived from a proper noun, for example Swiss cheese or Victorian architecture.
Suffering can be a noun, verb, or adjective. Noun: The suffering that the family went through was almost unbearable. Verb: The dog was suffering a leg wound. Adjective: The suffering father mourned over his daughter's passing.
ask them their favourite ice cram flavour?
To identify an adjective, you can ask the following questions: What kind of? Which one? How many? What color? What size? If the answer to any of these questions describes a property or quality of the noun, then it is likely an adjective.
An adjective doesn't ask anything. It describes a noun.
In 'the asking price', which is a noun phrase, 'asking' performs the function of an adjective, telling us more about the noun 'price.'But in "They were asking some awkward questions", asking is a verb, the past continuous(progressive) form of the verb 'to ask.'For more information, see Sources and Related linksbelow
The questions ask answers
what questions did plato ask
Yes, you can ask cooking questions.
You don't ask questions on wikipedia, but you can ask questions on wikianswers.
Ask 21 questions and hope someone answers them. In the real game 21 questions, you ask 21 questions and who ever can't answer them looses. ask 21 question?
psychoanalyst ask questions which generally haunt them
Because then there wouldn't be anyone to ask or answer questions.
Ask No Questions was created on 1986-02-01.
The Questions We Ask at Night was created in 2006.