An article is not technically an adjective, but its sole purpose (like adjectives) is to modify a noun. Articles can be called 'determiners' (separate parts of speech).
The word "the" is an article, a type of adjective, not a subject.
No. It's the indefinite article a/an. A book, An apple and so on.
The words "on the outside" are three different parts of speech. on: preposition the: article outside: noun
According to an online dictionary, some can be an adjective, a pronoun, or an adverb. It depends on how it is used. As an adjective: Some person may object. As a pronoun: Some think it's real. As an adverb: I like baseball some.
There is no adjective. But the phrase "by the oven" would likely be an adjective prepositional phrase.
it is an adjective
'The' is an adjective, in fact it is a particular type of adjective known as an article, and it is a 'definite article' at that.
"The" is not an adjective. It is an article.
Strange is an adjective.
Strange is an adjective.
It is not technically an adjective. It is called an article, and is one of the two 'indefinite articles' - the other being "a." The third article is the definite article: "the."
The word "the" is an article, which is a type of adjective.
"An" is not an adjective, it's an indefinite article. ("The" is a definite article.) It is sometimes called a determiner."An" is not an adjective but one of the forms of the indefinite article, the other one being "a": A dog, An apple.
'The' is neither an adjective nor an adverb. It is an article.
the word "the" is NOT an adjective. It IS a definite article.
The word "an" is neither an adjective or an adverb. It's an article.
And is considered an article.