Baby is being used as an adjective in this case. Duck is a noun.
No. Me is an objective personal pronoun. It only functions colloquially as an adjective (noun adjunct) in terms such as "the Me generation" (refers to a subset of the Baby Boomers born 1946 to 1960).
No, unwrapped is not a noun. Unwrapped is the past participle of the verb to unwrap; the past participle is also used as an adjective. Example sentences: Verb: The baby unwrapped the candy by chewing the off the wrapper and spitting it out. Adjective: From now on, I'm giving the baby unwrapped candy.
The nest.
The word "Awake" can either be a verb or an adjective. Verb: "Don't awake him" Adjective: "The baby is awake."
Yes, it can be an adjective for each of its alternate meanings: - put under strain, or injured by accident or overuse (strained back, strained muscles) - metaphorically tense (a strained relationship) - with solids removed or sieved (strained baby food)
Baby is being used as an adjective in this case. Duck is a noun.
When a duck is a baby, it is called a duckling.
When a duck is a baby, it is called a duckling.
"The weather is just ducky" uses the adjective form, but "duckier" and "duckiest" are also adjective forms of "duck".
a duck's baby is called a ''duckling'' or a ''chick''
The baby duck is called a duckling or ducklings.
No, the duck will eat hamsters.
Duck make baby at 6 p.m.
it is a seed that the daddy duck plants in a mommy duck to make a baby duck
Duck themed baby shower is great for a baby shower. Duck is a gender-neutral theme that works for both boys and girls. http://www.newbornbib.com/top-menu/articles/throw-a-baby-duck-themed-baby-shower/
A female duck is called a duck, or, as a female bird, a hen.
Dilly or Bob make excellent baby duck names.