The noun "hand" is not actually an adjective, although handheld, handmade, handwritten, and hand-operated are.
When used with another noun, "hand" is called a noun adjunct or attributive noun. This is similar to the noun "noodle" in the term "noodle soup" or the word "work" in "work schedule."
Examples:
He was careful to set the hand brake on his vehicle.
The French farmer found an old hand grenade from World War I.
In cold weather, a hand warmer can come in handy while hunting.
The repair shop had several hand jacks in their garage.
Yes. you use the word 'bandaged' to describe something. Bandaged is an example of a word which is the past tense of a verb (in this case, to bandage) but which also can be used as an adjective. As a verb, it would be I bandaged his hand, and as an adjective it would be, he has a bandaged hand.
The word "couth" is a noun, a word for well mannered sophistication, a word for a quality, a word for a thing.A noun is used as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.The word "couth" is an adjective, used to describe a noun as well mannered, sophisticated.Examples:Eddie Haskell was well known for his couth in the presence of parents. (noun)Her manners showed a couth upbringing. (adjective)
Nouns are not describing words, adjectives describe noun. The word vanilla is a noun or an adjective.You can use the adjective 'vanilla' to describe a noun:vanilla ice creamvanilla hand creamOr, you can use adjectives to describe the noun 'vanilla':pure vanillaFrench vanilla
u cant migrate in anoun
Yes. Bigger is the comparative adjective in that sentence.
tendering a helping hand is this a correct sentence?
by adjective in the sentence
NO but in the sentence "Use of the word "in" as an adjective is IN these days" the IN is an adjective
no
An adjective describes a noun.
Yes, as long as you use the word to describe another word in the sentence, original is an adjective. For example, in the sentence "This is an original painting by van Gogh." the word "original" is an adjective. If, however you use the word to describe the entire item as in "This is an original.", it is a noun.
The word "meet" is not an adjective and cannot be used as an adjective.
There is an adjective in that question. An adjective describes a noun or a pronoun. In some cases, the same word can be either an adjective or an adverb.
An adjective is a word that describes a noun or a verb. An example of a sentence that uses the word "abstract" in a sentence as an adjective would be: It is difficult for children to fully comprehend many abstract ideas.
you don't LOL
An adjective is a part of speech that is commonly called a "describing" word. An adjective is used to describe a noun in a sentence. For example, in the sentence "The sun set behind the red barn." the adjective is the word "red", and the noun it is describing is the word "barn."
An adjective describes something. A person, a place, an idea, anything at all. How you would use it in a sentence is to describe something. For example, in the sentence below, the word friendly is the adjective.Sally was a friendly girl.The adjective word friendly, describes what Sally is like.